Perfect Progressive Tenses

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Perfect Progressive Tenses

The perfect progressive tense describes actions that repeated over a period of time in the past, are
continuing in the present, and/or will continue in the future.

The present perfect progressive tense tells you about a continuous action that was initiated in the
past and finished at some point in the past; however, the action has some relation to the present
time. Use have/has + been + ing.

 It has been raining, and the street is still wet.


 I have been running, and I am still tired.
 She has been practicing the piano, and she is much better now.

The past perfect progressive tense illustrates a continuous action in the past that was completed
before another past action. Use had + been + ing.

 It had been raining, and the street was still wet.


 I had been running, and I was still tired.
 She had been practicing the piano, and she had gotten much better.

The future perfect progressive tense indicates a continuous action that will be completed in the
future. Use will + have + been + ing.

 By tonight, it will have been raining several hours, and the street will be very wet.
 By next summer, I will have been running for almost a year, and I will be fit and healthy.

 By the time of the concert, she will have been practicing the piano for several months,
and she will be much better.

When you talk about grammar, perfect means “complete,” and progressive means “unfinished.”

Perfect progressive sentences focus on the completion of an action that is,was or will be in progress.

Think about this sentence in the past perfect progressive:

“I had been waiting for three years by the time my application was approved.” In this example,
the emphasis is on duration of the first verb waiting.

Perfect progressive tenses often answer the question how long? There arethree perfect progressive ten
ses: the present perfect progressive, the past perfect progressive, and the future perfect progressive.

Past PerfectProgressive Present PerfectPro Future PerfectProgressive


gressive

It
It had It has will have beensnowing for th
beensnowing for twodays befo beensnowing allmont reedays by the timeit stops.
PERFECTPROGR re itstopped. h long.
ESSIVE
Will have been +
TENSES
Had been + -ingverb + Has/have + -ing verb + for/since
for/since -ingverb + for/since

Present Perfect Progressive

Let’s start with the present perfect progressive. You form the present perfectprogressive by using have b
een (or has been) followed by an –ing verb.

For instance, “She has been sitting in class since early this morning.” Theaction, sitting, is continuing.
But the emphasis is on the completed part of the action. Here are some more examples:

I have been waiting for 20 minutes.


I have been studying since I was a child.
It has been snowing all day long.

In all of these sentences, the emphasis is on how the finished activity relatesto the present.

A time reference is not required to use the present perfect progressive.Sometimes we use it
to refer to recently completed actions.

Imagine your friend comes to your house with red, puffy eyes. You might say,
“Your eyes are red. Have you been crying?”

Or you notice that a co-worker is looking tanned. You might ask,


“You looktanned. Have you have been sunbathing?”

Remember that stative verbs cannot be used in any progressive tense.


Astative verb describes unchanging situations, often mental states such asrealize, appear and seem.

You should not say, “I’ve been knowing you for


a long time.” If you have astative verb, use the present perfect: “I have known you for a long time.”

Almost all native speakers will contract, or shorten the pronoun that comes
before have or has. “I have been” will sound like, “I’ve been.”
Past Perfect Progressive

Let us move on to the past perfect progressive. The past perfect progressiveemphasizes the duration of
a past action before another action happened.

For example, “I had been smoking for 10 years before I quit.”

You form the past perfect progressive by using had been followed by an –ingverb.

Notice how the past perfect progressive often includes the adverbs for andsince to express duration. Yo
u will also see the adverbs before, when or by the time used to introduce a second action.

The second action uses the simple past tense. Here are some moreexamples:

I had been studying for 12 years by the time I graduated from highschool.
She had been living there since she was a child.
He had been teaching for 12 years before he was certified.

The past perfect progressive can also describe a recently completed action. For instance:

My clothes were wet because it had been raining.


He was talking loudly because he had been drinking.

Future Perfect Progressive

We will end with the future perfect progressive. The future perfect progressivedescribes the duration of
an action as it relates to a future event.

There are two ways to form the future perfect progressive. Both require twoactions. One is
by using “will have been” plus a present participle, followedby “when” or “by the time” and
the second action.

For example, “I will have been working for 35 years by the time I retire.”Notice that
the second planned action, retire, is in the simple present.
Thesimple future is never used with the second action.

The other way to form the future perfect progressive is using “be going tohave been” plus a present parti
ciple followed by “when” or “by the time” and the second action. The order of
the actions can be reversed with either form.

For example, “By the time the plane arrives, I am going to have been waitingfor five hours.”

With the future perfect progressive, it is not always clear if the –ing verbstarted in the past or will start in
the future. For example, “The doctor will havebeen working for 24 hours by the time his shift is finished.”

The future perfect progressive is rare because it is difficult to know the duration of
an activity relative to another future event.

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