Present Perfect Continuous Passive

    present perfect

  • used to show that an event happened or an action was completed at some time before the present I/we/you/they he/she/it have helped (have not helped) has helped (has not helped)
  • a perfective tense used to express action completed in the present; “`I have finished’ is an example of the present perfect”

    continuous

  • (of a function) Of which the graph is a smooth unbroken curve, i.e., one such that as the value of x approaches any given value a, the value of f(x) approaches that of f(a) as a limit
  • (continuously) at every point; “The function is continuously differentiable”
  • Forming an unbroken whole; without interruption
  • Forming a series with no exceptions or reversals
  • continuing in time or space without interruption; “a continuous rearrangement of electrons in the solar atoms results in the emission of light”- James Jeans; “a continuous bout of illness lasting six months”; “lived in continuous fear”; “a continuous row of warehouses”; “a continuous line has no
  • of a function or curve; extending without break or irregularity

    passive

  • (of a circuit or device) Containing no source of electromotive force
  • passive voice: the voice used to indicate that the grammatical subject of the verb is the recipient (not the source) of the action denoted by the verb; “`The ball was thrown by the boy’ uses the passive voice”; “`The ball was thrown’ is an abbreviated passive”
  • lacking in energy or will; “Much benevolence of the passive order may be traced to a disinclination to inflict pain upon oneself”- George Meredith
  • (of a metal) Made unreactive by a thin inert surface layer of oxide
  • Accepting or allowing what happens or what others do, without active response or resistance
  • peacefully resistant in response to injustice; “passive resistance”

present perfect continuous passive

Neuadd Orielton Hall.

Neuadd Orielton Hall.

Pamphlet by Archibald Keightley, M.D. (Cantab)
on the Desirability of establishing a
NATUR_KURHAUS
On the Orielton Hall Estate

Pointing out the unique advantages and unrivalled position the estate affords as a health resort, the climate being considered the most uniform in the kingdom
Foreword
This brief description merely touches on the advantages which may be derived from the various treatments to be obtained. It outlines the wishes of many physicians both in Germany and America. Then it will be found than an effort has been made at Orielton to realize for sufferers the conditions which, as a rule, are to be found only on the continent of Europe and to secure for them those comforts which, with the methods of treatment, are found at their best in the Sanatoria of the United States.

Brook Street May 3, 1905
London. W

Barmouth as a Health Resort

There is in Great Britain to-day a need which makes itself felt increasingly by all practitioners who have the continuous well being of their patients at heart. We who look to the restoration of that balance – that equilibrium which IS health – and who know that the unstable equilibrium called by the generic name of disease, is in the main caused by unhealthy habits, mental no less than physical: we who are not content to apply a mere temporary stop gap to inroads of that nature, know also that the lion in the path of progress is our inability to control the environment of our patients. And here again, the mental environment is meant, quite as much as the physical environment. Bad habits of exercise, breathing, dressing, sitting, walking, playing and working: of eating and drinking: and last but not least, of thinking in grooves leading to nervous waste and jar, all conduce to unhealthy conditions.

The resumption of hygienic habits in all these things is vital to well being, for such pathological conditions in their turn become hotbeds of disordered functions and, in time, of disease. In many cases, good hygienic habit has never been known – as, say in many cases of the wrong exercise of the respiratory organs – while in others it has been thrust out of sight by the strenuous demands of modern life.

What we want above all else is to be able to put our patients into surroundings which shall not only be helpful from the physiological standpoint, but which shall also appeal to all that is highest in Man, as well as to the sense of natural beauty and its deep repose. Fine scenery, high and pure air, such nearness to home as may make the patient more receptive to the idea of travel and necessary sojourn – all these have their effect on the nervous system and tend towards the restoration of healthy vibrations by the removal of causes of worry and discord, until the patient is strong enough to control himself amid the innumerable exigencies of life, and to govern his thoughts in the right direction both in good and evil fortune.

The various nature cures which are found so useful on the Continent – water cures, open air treatment, electrical treatment, dietetic precautions suited to the individual need after strict scientific examination: hygienic exercises, massage, rest-cures, the use of electrical currents, light and baths – each modern discovery in its due turn, all play their part in the restoration of health, and each should be at hand in a really scientific and up-to-date Sanatorium. Such an establishment would be primarily eclectic, for the requirement of one constitution or one mind is not that of another. Hence, we who wish to restore health permanently in chronic cases – the most difficult to deal with – should have at hand not one recuperative method, but a wide range from which to choose.

The proposed health Institute at Barmouth would meet these requirements in an unique manner. There is no similar Institution in Great Britain.

THE CLIMATE OF BARMOUTYH is one of exceptional equality: there are no extremes of heat and cold.

THE SITE OF THE SANATORIUM is sheltered from the North and North-West and almost entirely from the North-East, East, and South-East. It faces almost due South and has a splendid view of the mountain range of Cader Idris across the Estuary.
The site is flooded with sunshine all through the day from the time that the sun rises until it sets, and the average daily hours of sunshine are shown by the Meteorological Records to be longer than those of any place in these Islands, with the exception of places on the South Coast, and this difference is shown to be really of no importance when compared with the advantages which Barmouth possess. The disadvantage consists of an hour less sunshine per day. The advantage of the Sanatorium in especial is, that it is situated at a place which is not relaxing, even though its climate is mild.

It has frequently been stated that Barmouth is a relaxing place, and the fact that the myrtle, delicate fuschias, ve

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English Auxiliary Verbs Have, Has, Had | Active And Passive Voice | Have To, Had To, Have Had To, Having To | Has Have Had Grammar | Have Been, Has Been, Had Been | Use Of Has Have And Had | Have Has Had English Grammar | Present Perfect Continuous Tense | Past Perfect Continuous Tense | Different Usage Of Have Has Had – The House Even Has A Tunnel – The Shop Has A Tin Roof – She Had Her Back To Me | Has To – Have To + Verb First Form | Had To – Is Used To Express Certainty, Necessity, And Obligation – In Past | Had To + Be + Verb Third Form | Have Had To – Is Used To Express Certainty, Necessity, And Obligation – In Nearest Past | Had Had To + Be + Verb Third Form | Had Had To – Is Used To Express Certainty, Necessity, And Obligation – In Farthest Past | Had Had To + Be + Verb Third Form | Having To Verb | Have Verb Tense | To Have To + Verb – Also Denotes Compulsion | Have has had | To Be, To Have, To Have Been, Being, Having Been, Having, Having Had

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