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Javacoffee Posted 12 years ago
Vocabulary

English saying

What are the differences between "This is resolved" and "This has been resolved" ? If I resolved an issue right away. Do I use this "This is resolved" or "This has been resolved"?
  

Top answer

javacoffee This is resolved That is a statement of present condition. javacoffee This has been resolved That is a statement of a recent action. javacoffee If I resolved an issue right away.

  • javacoffee This is resolved That is a statement of present condition.
  • javacoffee This has been resolved That is a statement of a recent action.
  • javacoffee If I resolved an issue right away.
  • Do I use this "This is resolved" or "This has been resolved"?
  • You may use either.
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4 Answers
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javacoffeeThis is resolved
That is a statement of present condition.
javacoffeeThis has been resolved
That is a statement of a recent action.
javacoffeeIf I resolved an issue right away. Do I use this "This is resolved" or "This has been resolved"?
You may use either.
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What about past action? This had been resolved. Is this correct? Thank you.
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javacoffeeWhat about past action? This had been resolved. Is this correct?
A past action uses only simple past: this was resolved. Past perfect requires at least the appearance of another more recent past action in the context.
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Thank you for clarify. I'm no longer confused.Emotion: danceThanks again!

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