jimalton

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jimalton
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  August 2022     1 year ago

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Grammar.com
In your sentence, "have
been", of course, is the present perfect which when used as a verb
indicates some activity or state that has recently completed. In your
sentence the verb is the past passive "was meant"; and "to have been" is
in the form of a verb but is not performing as a verb but as a
preposition conveying more meaning than the alternative preposition
"as" such as that the surprise was not surprising, whereas "as" would
not convey that meaning.
 

1 year ago

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Quiz

Are you a grammar master?

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Identify the sentence with a subject-verb agreement error:
A Each of the students has completed their assignment.
B Neither the cat nor the dog were hungry.
C The book on the shelf belongs to Mary.
D The team of players is ready for the match.