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MEENA KANA RAM Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Is or has been

  1. The amount has since been recovered.
  2. The amount is since recovered.

what is the difference

  

Top answer

They're both OK, but most people say the first one. The present perfect and 'since' tend to go together well. CJ

  • They're both OK, but most people say the first one.
  • The present perfect and 'since' tend to go together well.
  • CJ
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4 Answers
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They're both OK, but most people say the first one. The present perfect and 'since' tend to go together well.

CJ

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my question was about difference between has +past participle and is + past participle

Those days are gone now.

Those days have gone.

what is the basic difference in meaning

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in some other site I have been taught that

the meaning of "those days are gone" is that those days are finally over, they are not going to come again &

"those days have gone" means those days passed , and it is not certain whether they will come again or not.

he is dead

he has died

could u explain the difference

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Thank you very much for clearing my doubt , so I think in the same way there is no difference between "he has gone" and "he is gone".

Regards

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