Hi there In American English the sentence is awkward. It's not "wrong" to say "I never have been" but a native speaker wouldn't commonly phrase it that way.
The other "error" : "been IN" isn't technically an error either but a native speaker wouldn't commonly phrase it this way either (now that I live in Spain, i find its super common for non Native speakers when they translate). A native speaker would say ..."been TO London." So You may say I've never been to London Or... I have never been to London Hope this helps.! El El mié, 17 ago 2016 a las 9:40, Daniel Naber < daniel.na...@languagetool.org> escribió: > Hi English native speakers, > > a user complained about two errors not found in: "I never have been in > London." > > Is it actually wrong to say "I never have been" vs. "I have never been"? > What's the other error. > > Regards > Daniel > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > _______________________________________________ > Languagetool-devel mailing list > Languagetool-devel@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/languagetool-devel >
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