The Present Perfect Continuous (or Present Perfect Progressive) is constructed this way:
The conjugation is fairly simple. However, the ESL student must remember to use "has" for the third person, and there are more parts for the ESL student to keep in order. Here are some examples of Present Perfect Continuous verbs with I, you, he/she/it, they, and we.
- 1. I have been talking. I have been walking. I have been dancing. I have been eating.
- 2. You have been talking. You have been walking. You have been dancing. You have had been eating.
- 3. She/He/It has been talking. She/He/It has been walking. She/He/It has been dancing. She/He/It has been eating.
- 4. They have been talking. They have been walking. They have been dancing. They have been eating.
- 5. We have been talking. We have been walking. We have been dancing. We have been eating.
Here are the Present Perfect Continuous forms the English language learner must learn.
- 1. Affirmative Usage (e.g., She has been studying English as a Foreign language for four years.)
- 2. Negative Usage (e.g., She has not been living here since 2005.)
- 3. Yes/No Questions (e.g., Have you been playing tennis for very long?)
- 4. Short Answers (e.g., Yes, she has. No, she hasn't.)
- 5. WH- Questions (e.g., When have they been backpacking through Europe?)
Here are some examples of this tense using this first function:
- She has been working on this project for three years.
- They have been acting strangely since they arrived.
- You look great! Have you been working out lately?
- I've been thinking about taking a trip to South America.
Source:
www.teaching-esl-to-adults.com
Hi, I'm glad you liked the article/page I wrote entitled "Tips for Teaching Present Perfect Continuous Forms" and posted at http://www.teaching-esl-to-adults.com/present-perfect-continuous-forms.html enough to copy and post it here on your blog.
ReplyDeleteI hope it will be helpful to your readers.
In the future, I would love if you could include a link to my website for any content I have written that you decide to borrow.
Best regards,
Debra Garcia
www.teaching-esl-to-adults.com
Hello Miss Debra,
ReplyDeleteI apologize for borrowing your articles without putting a proper thanks and including a link on it. I was just intending to use it only for my office workers and I didn't think that other people could actually visit my blog site.
Thank you ma'am for waking me up from the flaws I made. Because of it, I'm putting all the links of the things I put in my site.
Thank you.
Catherine