Have been done or has been done?
Have been done or has been done?
“Has been done” is a present perfect passive tense, which should be used for an action that happened at an unspecified time in the past. You should not use this tense when the time is specified. Use the simple past passive “was done” instead.
How do you say the work has been done?
English at work: 6 different ways to say “the work is done”
- It’s all done! “All done” is used for saying that you have finished doing something.
- It’s a wrap.
- That’s that!
- Mission accomplished!
- It’s done and dusted.
- Finished / completed.
Is it all has been or all have been?
‘All has been done’ is grammatically correct in the absence of the reference. I would like to add something to the answers of the first 3–4 experts. If ‘all’ is used with a countable noun, a plural verb ‘have’ should be used and if it is used with a mass/uncountable noun ‘has’ should be used.
Has been done or completed?
The work has been done is correct to say grammatically. If you’re talking about one thing, it would be “has been completed”. For example “This has been completed.”
Has been done example?
“Has been done” is the construction we use when we create the passive voice of a sentence with “has done.” The object becomes the subject. “Tommy has done his homework.” “The homework has been done by Tommy.”
When has work been done?
In summary, work is done when a force acts upon an object to cause a displacement. Three quantities must be known in order to calculate the amount of work. Those three quantities are force, displacement and the angle between the force and the displacement.
How do you say job is done?
Here are a few possibilities:
- I’ve completed it.
- I got it done.
- It’s over. / It’s complete.
- That’s it for me. / That’s all for me.
- I’m out.
When to use has been or have been?
“has been” and “have been” both are used in present perfect continuous. While “had been” is used in past perfect continuous. “Has been” is more commonly used for third person , while “have been” can be used for both first person and second person.It can also be used as a plural form for third person.
What is done has been done?
There is no changing something; it’s finished or final. For example, I forgot to include my dividend income in my tax return but what’s done is done—I’ve already mailed the form. This expression uses done in the sense of “ended” or “settled,” a usage dating from the first half of the 1400s.