What is the meaning of how you been?
“How have you been?” is a common question from native English speakers. It’s asking what you have been up to and how life has been for you from from a certain point in time. Or maybe since the last time you spoke on the phone. Or it could also be since the last time you sent each other private messages online.
What is the answer for how you been?
You could also say “How are you?” using the present tense. But because you care about your friend and you knew he was sick, it would be better to ask “How have you been?” He can respond by saying “Oh, I’ve been great,” or “I’ve been feeling much better.”
Is it correct to say how you been?
‘How you been’ is not grammatically correct. The correct form of saying it is ‘how have you been’ which means to ask a person about his well being like how is he/she.
How do you ask someone how they have been?
It is common to begin an informal email to a friend or relative by asking how the person is doing, using a question like one of these:
- How are things?
- How are things going?
- Hi, how are you?
- How are you doing?
How have you been or being?
As a rule, the word been is always used after have (in any form, e.g., has, had, will have). The word being is never used after have. Being is used after to be (in any form, e.g., is, was, were).
Where have you been meaning?
Where have you been? is asking where one was at a recent time in the past, over an undefined period. It implies nothing about the current location of either the querent or the respondent.
Where do we use been?
Been is the past participle. Use it after the verbs have/has (present perfect) and had (past perfect). Examples: I’ve been busy lately.
Have been being Meaning?
It is the present perfect progressive conjugation of “to be”, describing an action (or in this case, a state) which began in the past, is continuous to the present, and may continue into the future. “I have been being sad” makes perfect sense to me.