Find English Teachers
邓文栋
Very simple question in English:
Can I say “it has been finished”?or “it had been finished”?When should I use “has” and when should I use“had”?
Feb 11, 2023 5:07 PM
Answers · 6
2
Some of the most common uses:
It has been finished. - This is recent news.
It has been finished for (+ period of time)... / ...since (+ point in time)... - This how long it has been since it was finished.
It had been finished when X happened. -The first past action had been completed before the second one occurred.
It had been finished by (point in time). -The action was completed before a point in the past.
February 11, 2023
1
I'm going to give you a somewhat theoretical explanation.
The tense of "it has been" is called "present perfect". It really does talk about the present more than the past. "Has" is present tense and "been" is the past participle of "to be".
The phrase "Tom has been" means Tom presently has an EXPERIENCE of being. If Tom is dead, you usually should not say "Tom has been". It wouldn't make sense because Tom can no longer have anything. You would say instead "Tom was." (Actually, you could say he has been, but you would be imagining his non-living presence).
"It has been finished" means it has "being finished" (right now) as an experience. It is a statement about the present, not the past. It says that right now, "being finished" is a history, or a memory, or an experience that it possesses.
February 12, 2023
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!
邓文栋
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, Other
Learning Language
Other
Articles You May Also Like

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
45 likes · 11 Comments

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
33 likes · 6 Comments

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
63 likes · 23 Comments
More articles