Common questions

Has been already sent or has already been sent?

Has been already sent or has already been sent?

It is simplest, probably, to just say that ‘been sent’ is the verb, and you should keep those two words together because they are the verb. So you can say ‘already been sent’ or ‘been sent already’ but you should NOT say ‘been already sent’.

How do you say I have sent the mail?

I have mailed you. I have sent on mail. ‘I have mailed you’ – is a correct sentence.

Have sent or has sent?

Both are correct, but “I have already sent” is the present perfect tense and “I had already sent” is the past perfect.

Which tense is used with already?

Present Perfect Tense
Present Perfect Tense – Already, Yet, Since and For. Already means that something happened earlier than we expected. With Present Perfect already usually goes after have or has and before the main verb. Examples – We’ve already had our breakfast.

Has been send or sent?

If the report is on its way, you can say: is being sent. Of course if you say:has been sent, you have to realise that it is also being sent and that means it hasn’t arrived yet. Remember: I didn’t send it.

Is the phrase ” has been already sent ” grammatically correct?

In case you’re wondering why you were downvoted (although I’m not the downvoter, so I don’t know for sure), see this Ngram. While “has been already sent” might have been grammatical 100 years ago, it no longer is used; “has been already made” currently occurs at 1–2% of the frequency of “has already been made”. – Peter Shor Jun 24 ’14 at 14:05

When to use ” I’m not sure that “?

” I’m not sure that” is used when expressing uncertainty or pointing directly to a certain situation, person, object. I’m not sure that I’m the right person for it.

Which is correct ” the attachment has been sent ” or ” I already sent the attachment “?

“the attachment has already been sent ” is correct. You could also say simply “I already sent the attachment”. Both are correct. There is no difference between the meaning of the two. Because ‘already’ is a modifier.

What’s the difference between’has’and’already’?

Both are correct. There is no difference between the meaning of the two. Because ‘already’ is a modifier. Consider: the job has almost been completed as oppose to the job almost has been completed, or the flight has always been delayed as oppose to the flight always has been delayed.

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Ruth Doyle