In he was retired, retired is used as an adjective. However, it uses retired as an adjective, whereas in “he has retired ” it’s a past participle in a finite construction in the present perfect. I feel 'retired ' has a more favorable sense, like something has become rare and more valuable after no longer being made (e.g.
Sunbury never went to bed, she retired to show that she was a refined woman who used a very formal. Hello, i'm working on a translation and the narrator specifies that mrs. I'd like to get retired early if i can afford it.
A toy has been retired), while ' discontinued ' is. 'retirees' has definitely an american feel to it, and i haven't come. Something can only get retired if someone else retires it, and typically people voluntarily choose to retire. The phrase .business year ending. is a fixed expression used.
I'd say i have retired since last summer because the word retire is an intrasitive verb. He had retired is a conjugated form of the the verb “retire” (third person singular, past perfect). Because retired can be vpp and adj, so i think. Yes, is retired is fine.
If he's already retired, i'd use retired instead of retiring even if you are celebrating his retirement. However retire is also used in passive as a transitive verb. I assume that's why it's put was retired when most often retire would be the preferred form.