[General] It has been a

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tzfujimino

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It has been a wonderful experience of working here.​



Then is it present perfect tence?

Yes, it's the present perfect tense.:)
(It's "tense", not "tence")
You should delete "of" in that sentence.
 

Matthew Wai

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I don't think it's in the active voice.
In my humble opinion, 'is' is a finite verb in the OP's sentence, so could the sentence be active?

Not a teacher.
 

Tdol

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It has been a wonderful experience of working here.

Is the above sentence in passive voice?

It is/was/has been/will be a wonderful experience working here are all active.
 

tzfujimino

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In my humble opinion, 'is' is a finite verb in the OP's sentence, so could the sentence be active?

Not a teacher.

Well, in my view, for a sentence to be in the active voice, it needs to have an "action verb". The verb "be" is a "linking verb", not an "action verb".

Not a grammarian
 

Matthew Wai

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Well, in my view, for a sentence to be in the active voice, it needs to have an "action verb".
In my humble opinion, there is no action verb in 'I own a car'. Do you think it is not an active sentence?

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tzfujimino

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In my humble opinion, there is no action verb in 'I own a car'. Do you think it is not an active sentence?

Not a teacher.

Hello, Matthew. I think it is in the active voice.
Well, as you pointed out, stative verbs are also used in the active voice.
I apologize for the inappropriate expression that I used above. As I said, I'm not a grammarian.:oops:

However, I do not consider "It is a car", for instance, to be in the active.
Do you?
 

tzfujimino

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The active mood of a verb is not connected with 'action'.

He is being tortured is passive mood.
I am sleeping is active mood.

Hello, Piscean.:)

I'm not familiar with those terminologies.
May I ask what "active mood" and "passive mood" are?
 
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Matthew Wai

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It seems to me that tzfujimino cannot accept the fact that a sentence where the verb 'to be' is followed by a noun or an adjective is in the active, but I am not a teacher.
 

MikeNewYork

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Barb_D

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The passive requires that you have someone or something "doing" something to someone/something else and the "someone/something else" is the grammatical subject of the sentence.

Active: I broke the vase.
Passive: The vase was broken.

Active: A drunk driver struck my friend Maria.
Passive: My friend Maria was struck by a drunk driver.

I have never considered whether a sentence without a transitive verb (no action being performed on another person/thing) can be active.
I have a car.
I am tired.

You certainly cannot make it passive.
 

Matthew Wai

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I have never considered whether a sentence without a transitive verb (no action being performed on another person/thing) can be active.
I think there is no transitive verb in 'Peter is looking at John', which seems to be active, but I am not a teacher.
 

Barb_D

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HAVE is transitive, but is used only in the active in its stave senses.
Terrible example. "I feel happy" is a better one. Or "I worked as a secretary."
 

tzfujimino

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If "all English sentences are either in the active or in the passive" were true, I'd accept the fact that "I feel happy", "it is a car" and "I worked as a secretary" are all in the active.
 

Barb_D

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Right I got that. It was a terrible choice on my part to use "have."
 
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