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'being' and 'been' : the difference

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'being' and 'been' : the difference Empty 'being' and 'been' : the difference

Post  Vincent Law Wed Jan 09, 2013 3:19 pm

'being' and 'been' : the difference Being_10

Use 'been' after the verb 'to have'.
Use 'being' after the verb 'to be'.


'Being' and 'Been':
Some writers occasionally confuse the words 'being' and 'been'. As a rule, the word 'been' is always used after 'have' (in any form; e.g. has, had, will have); whereas, 'being' is never used after 'have'. 'Being' is used after 'to be' (in any form; e.g., is, was, were).

Examples:
"I have been busy."
WRONG: "Terry has being taking the stores to the shelter."
('being' cannot follow 'has' or 'have')


Being as a Noun:
The word 'being' can also be a noun.

Examples:
"A human being."
"A strange being stepped out of the space ship."



Being as a Gerund:
The word 'being' can also be a gerund (which is a type of noun).

Examples:
"Do you like being so ignorant?"
"The accident was caused by his being so clumsy."
"I live in terror of not being misunderstood."
(Oscar Wilde)


NOTE - THEY'RE PARTICIPLES:
'Being' is the present participle of the verb 'to be'. (For comparison, 'cooking' is the present participle of the verb 'to cook'.)
'Been' is the past participle of the verb to be. (For comparison, 'cooked' is the past participle of the verb 'to cook'.)
Usually participles can be used as adjectives before nouns, but 'being' and 'been' can't.
Past participles (e.g., deleted, broken) and present participle (e.g., cooking, running) can be used like adjectives.

"Broken link."
"Deleted file."
"Cooking sauce."
"Running shoes."


However, even although 'been' and 'being' are participles, they are not used as adjectives before nouns.

WRONG: "The been car."
(What does this mean? The car that used to be a car? This is nonsense.)
WRONG: "The being tree."
(The tree that is a tree? This is nonsense.)

'Been' is always used in conjunction with the verb 'to have', which is its auxiliary verb. The auxiliary verb for 'being', on the other hand, is the verb 'to be' (e.g., is, are, was).

"He is being stupid."
WRONG: "He is been stupid."
('been' goes with 'has')
"He has been stupid."

However, 'being' can act as an adjective before a noun (or a pronoun) when it is joined by other words to form a participle phrase.
"Being such a lazy oaf, Tony often drives to the nearby shops."
('Being such a lazy oaf' is participle phrase that describes Tony.)


TAKE THE TEST:
Select the correct version:

- You have 'been' / 'being' a very naughty boy.

- The giant panda has 'been' / 'being' making headlines since he was born.

- Has this pasta 'been' / 'being' re-heated?

- The court ruled that the teacher was 'been' / 'being' vindictive.

- Your mum's paintings are 'been' / 'being' sold next week.

http://www.grammar-monster.com/easily_confused/being_been.htm
Vincent Law
Vincent Law
Advanced Fluency
Advanced Fluency

Posts : 1537
Join date : 2011-12-22
Age : 49
Location : Philadelphia

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