Underestimate The British Farmers At...
ChatterBank1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Oh dear Ky.
Dont thank him too much. Neither are adverbs (which usually end in ---ly. So 'usually' is an adverb
being is a present participle, from the verb to be
I am being tiresome.
been is a past participle, also from the verb to be. It will almost always have the word 'has' or 'have' in front of it.
Your son has been a pain in the neck.
I have been for a hair-cut
This in the past - perfect tense.
Forget adverbs - wrong part of speech.
Being is also a noun. It means existence.
Has-been is also a slang noun meaning a person who is old and decrepit, hwoever I dont think that concerns us here. If you want classical English grammar, you have to ask someone my age (about 150) because they stopped teaching English grammar in schools about 50years ago for some reason.