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- Job was completed, job has completed and job has been completed?
Mr A, Mowing at the job site has completed It could be better if I say: "Mowing was completed at the job site" or "mowing has been completed " But how odd was the original one? Do people consider that was just a typo or people can tell that I am not a native speaker because the structure of the sentence was incorrect?
- Complete or Completed - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
"Complete" indicates a thing that has been finished "Completed" is a past-tense verb form, and while by itself means much the same thing as "complete", it has the additional implication of something that has been finished, and as a consequence, the word has additional implications of the process that completed the thing I would go with
- Which is correct: have been completed or are completed
The requested modifications have been completed is better, because you are referring to a continuing action (you finished writing the code, but it will get tested next)
- Grammatical Dissection of “it is not completed yet”
Yes, "completed" is a verb in your example But it's ungrammatical: a passive VP is required as in "It has not been completed yet" The nearest active equivalent is "x has not completed it yet" "Yet" means 'up to the time of the utterance' Note that "completed" is only an adjective when it's a pre-head modifier of a noun, as in "Please submit your [completed application] within 14 day", and
- present perfect - I have completed versus I had completed - English . . .
I completed all the tasks assigned How to convey this ? I have completed all the tasks or I had completed all the tasks Which one is correct ?
- What is the difference between finished and completed?
This perhaps reflects a distinction between finished as meaning "got done with" and completed as meaning "made whole": the author can be understood either to have got done with writing the novel or to have made the novel whole; but the reader can be understood only to have got done with reading it
- word choice - has been completed or is completed? - English . . .
The present perfect emphasizes slightly more that there was a process that led to the completion of the report, while the present simple merely states the fact that it is indeed completed That said, I think they're virtually equivalent due to the fact that the verb completed in itself means some acquired state Further, the second example is clearly ambiguous as to whether completed is an
- grammar - What is the difference between I almost completed. . . and I . . .
I almost completed Indicates an action in the past, which you were doing, and is all gone now So you say "I almost completed the running race, but had to stop half-way through " I have almost completed Means something is still ongoing, and you expect to finish soon "I have almost completed the race, there are only 500m to go " (The tense names give these two away - "almost completed" is past
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