Home

Been

Been is the past participle of the verb be in English. It is used with auxiliary verbs to form perfect tenses and the passive voice, and it can function as a participial expression in phrases such as “the experiences that have been shared.”

Forms and general rules: The base form is be; present tense forms are am, is, are; past

Common uses: Present perfect: “I have been to France.” Past perfect: “They had been waiting for hours.”

Etymology and history: Been derives from the Old English verb be, with its modern form developing through

tense
forms
are
was,
were;
the
present
participle
is
being;
the
past
participle
is
been.
Been
cannot
stand
alone
as
a
finite
verb
and
occurs
with
an
auxiliary
such
as
have
or
be
in
passive
constructions.
Future
perfect:
“By
next
week,
she
will
have
been
there.”
Passive
voice:
“The
work
has
been
completed.”
Questions
and
negatives:
“Have
you
been
to
Paris?”
“They
have
not
been
informed.”
In
informal
speech,
contractions
such
as
I’ve
been
and
you’ve
been
are
common.
Middle
English
into
Contemporary
English.
It
is
the
standard
past
participle
in
Modern
English
and
is
cognate
with
similar
forms
in
other
Germanic
languages.
Its
irregular
status
reflects
a
long
history
of
morphological
change
in
the
English
verb
system.