Has been completed or completed?
William Brown
Updated on June 08, 2026
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Thereof, has completed or has been completed?
Complete is an adjective, therefore 1 is describing the state that the civil work is in. Completed, however, is the past participle of the verb to complete, and through making it passive (been completed?), it effectively acts as a description.
Likewise, has been successfully completed or has been completed successfully? Hi as_99, There is no difference between "successfully completed" and "completed successfully". Your original sentence is wrong. It's "the installation" that has completed, not "program X".
Considering this, has or been completed?
"Has been" and "have been" are both in the present perfect tense. "Has been" is used in the third-person singular and "have been" is used for first- and second-person singular and all plural uses. The present perfect tense refers to an action that began at some time in the past and is still in progress.
Has been completed which tense?
present perfect tense
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