He has been being.

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tufguy

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He has been involved in a lot of scams.

He has been involved in a lot of scams for a long time.

He has been being involved in a lot of scams.

He has been being involved in a lot of scams for a long time.


Could you please tell me what is the difference in meaning of these sentences?
 

tufguy

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Only the first two are correct.

What about "It has been being"? "The building has been being built for the last two years" is this sentence correct?
 

Rover_KE

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We generally don't use 'has been being'. It's an ugly structure which is easily avoidable.

'The building has been under construction for the last two years.'
 

emsr2d2

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It can be used in something like "He has been being blackmailed for over a year".
 

Tdol

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You could get round the ugliness by using been getting blackmailed.
 

emsr2d2

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If I were desperate to avoid "He has been being ...", that's probably the only alternative I could come up with but I wouldn't use it. I have no issue with "has been being".
 
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