The apprentice
Member
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2013
- Member Type
- English Teacher
- Native Language
- Spanish
- Home Country
- Dominican Republic
- Current Location
- Dominican Republic
Dear teachers and members:
I° - Ronald Reagan: «138 members of my administration were investigated, indicted, or convicted of crime.»
II° - Barrack Obama: «Not a single one of mine has [investigated, indicted, or convicted].»
III° - «Their bags were picked up and taken to New York, but mine haven't [picked up and taken to New York].»
It's obvous that BEEN has been omitted from quotes II° and III°. After discussing with some members about it, I have the following 4 questions [which are] at the end of this post.
It's clearly known that BE is used to form the passive voice, and HAVE the perfect tenses. In short answers the main verb is not necessarily to be mentioned when a question has previously been asked; an auxiliary is not omitted in any sentence whether long of short.
Have you been taken to New York?
No, I haven't.
QUESTIONS:
(1) Is BE an auxiliary verb in the passive voice?
(2) If is HAVE the auxiliary for the passive voice BEEN TAKEN, or HAVE and BE both are auxiliaries in the question above?
(3) Knowing that an auxiliary cannot be omitted in any sentence, can BE, which I consider to be an auxiliary in the passive voice, be omitted when a short sentence is used in order to omit some parts of a previous one as in sentences II° and III° above?
(4) Is BE is an auxiliary in the passive voice, why is it omitted in short answers?
Thanks up front.
I° - Ronald Reagan: «138 members of my administration were investigated, indicted, or convicted of crime.»
II° - Barrack Obama: «Not a single one of mine has [investigated, indicted, or convicted].»
III° - «Their bags were picked up and taken to New York, but mine haven't [picked up and taken to New York].»
It's obvous that BEEN has been omitted from quotes II° and III°. After discussing with some members about it, I have the following 4 questions [which are] at the end of this post.
It's clearly known that BE is used to form the passive voice, and HAVE the perfect tenses. In short answers the main verb is not necessarily to be mentioned when a question has previously been asked; an auxiliary is not omitted in any sentence whether long of short.
Have you been taken to New York?
No, I haven't.
QUESTIONS:
(1) Is BE an auxiliary verb in the passive voice?
(2) If is HAVE the auxiliary for the passive voice BEEN TAKEN, or HAVE and BE both are auxiliaries in the question above?
(3) Knowing that an auxiliary cannot be omitted in any sentence, can BE, which I consider to be an auxiliary in the passive voice, be omitted when a short sentence is used in order to omit some parts of a previous one as in sentences II° and III° above?
(4) Is BE is an auxiliary in the passive voice, why is it omitted in short answers?
Thanks up front.
Last edited: