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Kilimanjaro Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

having been banned vs to be banned

1b00One of the non-violent sports.......... by the King of England was golf in the 1400s, when the King thought his soldiers weren't doing enough archery practice.02br
02br
02b
00A) banning 02br
00B) to ban 02br
00C) having been banned 02br
00D) to be banned 02br
00E) to be banning02br
02br
00"D" is ok. What about "C"? Any chance?0-
  

Top answer

0 I wouldn't use C. I would use on of the following:02br 02br 00banned02br 00to be banned02br 00that was banned02br 00that had been banned 0-

  • 0 I wouldn't use C.
  • I would use on of the following:02br 02br 00banned02br 00to be banned02br 00that was banned02br 00that had been banned 0-
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5 Answers
0
0 I wouldn't use C. I would use on of the following:02br
02br
00banned02br
00to be banned02br
00that was banned02br
00that had been banned 0-
0
0 Here's some good examples with "having been banned": 02br
02br
05002br
02br
00 You could say: 02br
02br
01i01b00Having been banned02b00 by the King of England in the 1400s, golf was nowhere to be seen for centuries thereafter.02br
02br
02i
00Of course, I have no idea about the truth
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0 I would go for F, 01i00banned02i00. 0-
0
hi
the answer would be
none of them but rather
'HAD BEEN BANNED'
BECAUSE ITS IS PAST PERFECT PASSIVE FORM OF SENTENCE.
0
having been banned in incorrect since the time is 1400 which is long back
you can use
banned
to be banned
had been banned
was being banned "I think it is correct but think only"

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