Season they usialy return to their village to Secure their Crops of Corn Beens punkins &c &c.
Said that the Menitarras Came out of the water to the East and Came to this Country and built a village near the mandans from whome they got Corn beens &c.
Supper of boiled young Corn, beens & quashes of which he gave me in Wooden bowls.
Side by a Narrow Deep Channel, those Indians Cultivate on the Island Corn Beens Simmins, Tobacco &c &c.
And any man who still has health may with the winners stack, and have a chance at fame and wealth--for has-beens do come back.
Men say that fellows down and out ne'er leave the rocky track, but facts will show, beyond a doubt, that has-beens do come back.
THE HAS-BEENS I read the papers every day, and oft encounter tales which show there's hope for every jay who in life's battle fails.
We are as apt to borrow trouble from the might-have-beens of our past life as from any thing else.
There swept over it all the conflicting waves of regrets over might-have-beens and the gloomy shades of despair.
Better so even, for should he ever be freed it will not be until the twentieth century is well on its way to the have beens of time, then only to find himself a battered hulk stranded on a shore from which the tide has ebbed forever.
Our own imagination is at fault about the would-have-beens and might-have-beens in this case.
This is where he differs from most who are called the Might-have-beens of literature.
In a sense also one may say that these tales are the great might-have-beens of Dickens.
Critics have called Keats and others who died young "the great Might-have-beens of literary history.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "beens" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.