1)"has-been" is a noun.
2)"It has been the best one" has nothing to do with "has-been".
3) "It has-been the best one" does not make any sense.
4) It, a has-been, remains the best one (in my eyes) makes sense.
So with a clear definition of "perfect tense" in mind, there is no chance any confusion takes place.
see inside
所有跟帖:
•
Thanks. I know.
-肖莊-
♀
(1813 bytes)
()
02/05/2015 postreply
17:23:36
•
language feeling or intuition.
-askerfor-
♀
(128 bytes)
()
02/05/2015 postreply
19:44:13
•
Thank you.
-肖莊-
♀
(0 bytes)
()
02/05/2015 postreply
21:03:56