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Are both correct? Yes. The first can only be used on the same day of course. The second could be used the next day too in some situations, to refer to the previous one.Apr 22, 2020
Are both correct? Yes. The first can only be used on the same day of course. The second could be used the next day too in some situations, to refer to the previous one.
Or, other replies are~ (How’s your day) “It’s been great, and yours?” “It’s been good, yours?” (How’s it going) “I’m well, how about you?” “It’s going great, what about you?” ^ these are all happy/positive replies, but you can also say “I’ve had better days” or “It’s not been great..”
In US English, you can use this informal expression to ask how someone is or ask them what they have been doing.
4 | »what’s up |
---|---|
2 | »how’s it going |
2 | »what’s cooking |
2 | »what’s up doc |
1 | »all right |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fM6w70tPHro
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6OsY1L8CNsw
was | were |
---|---|
seemed | appeared |
came to be | had been |
turned out to be | has been |
wus | wast |
obsolete | antiquated |
---|---|
stale | superseded |
timeworn | unfashionable |
past it | Stone Age |
done for | had it |
“How have you been up to” doesn’t really make sense to me. “How have you been?” is the same as “how are you”, but you ask it to someone you haven’t seen in a long time. So, you are asking how things are going but over the whole period of time that you haven’t talked to or seen them. … Person A: Hey, long time no see!
What does “what are you up to today” mean? “What are you up to today” means “what are your plans today.” Thus, it is often interpreted as an implicit invitation to do something for the day.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JidYxKS-Lkw
It means “What have you been doing recently.” Typical responses could be: “I have done nothing for a while now.
Where have you been? is asking where one was at a recent time in the past, over an undefined period. It implies nothing about the current location of either the querent or the respondent.
When a guy asks how you are doing randomly during the day or a girl remembers some specific thing you said a while ago, it can reveal that they are genuinely interested in you. They’re putting in the effort to connect on a deeper level.
13 | »how do you feel now |
---|---|
7 | »how do you feel right now |
7 | »now how do you feel |
3 | »how do you feel |
3 | »how are you now |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhSqfzaMuLM
Has been is present perfect tense; addition of the past participle makes it present perfect passive. … Is being is present progressive tense; addition of the past participle makes it present progressive passive. Development of the product has started but is not yet finished.
1 Answer. “Has been” and “have been” are both in the present perfect tense. “Has been” is used in the third-person singular and “have been” is used for first- and second-person singular and all plural uses. The present perfect tense refers to an action that began at some time in the past and is still in progress.
If the subject of a sentence is I – You – We – They or a plural noun (cars, birds, children) we use ‘have been’. Examples: ☛A total of five cars have been stolen from the city center. ☛Birds have been following me all day long.
How have you been? How’s everything? How’s it going? How are things going?