I believe that 'you had been asked' sounds correctly and the other, has the wrong tense. It has been set in present tense and is not used as often; therefor it will not sound correct to most people.
"Have been" is the correct phrase to use. "Have being" is not grammatically correct.
Yes, that is correct!
Both sentences are correct according to the philosophy of English."Had been asked" is in the pluperfect tense, referring to a time before a time in the past. We might say "She was asked to present etc, and she had been asked several times before to present etc."
It means you have been asked to confirm that the other employee's testimony is correct and factual.
Do you mean "had been," as in "She had been a taxi driver for years." If so, 'had being' isn't correct.
I bleive the correct spelling is lamented. If this is the word that is being asked about, the meaning is to mourn.
Yes, it is correct, assuming that the question is asked towards the end of the evening, when the activity has been completed.
The verb "have been" is the correct form for the first person, second person, a the third person singular.Examples:I have been...You have been...He (she/it) has been...We have been...They have been...The form "have being" is not a correct verb form.
Being able is the correct version of the sentence. You can use it as a fragment of any sentence.
If the question being asked means, "What unit of time is greater than a century?", then the correct answer is "A millennium; however, if the question being asked means, "What comes after a century?", then the correct answer is "Another century."
It would help if you asked a question or described symptoms instead of being so vague that changing the tire might be the correct answer.
NO. These are correct; I could have punched I have punched I had punched I had been punched I have been punching I had been punching