A: How long have you been waiting?

B: I've been waiting for three hours.

Present Perfect Continuous

have or has + been + verb ~ing

Positive & Negative Sentences

I

You

We

They

have
've
have not
haven't
been raining for a few hours.
waiting for ten minutes.
working today since 8 AM.

He

She

It

has
's
has not
hasn't

Questions

Have

I

you

we

they

been raining for a few hours?
waiting for ten minutes?
working today since 8 AM?
Has

he

she

it


Use

How Long?

We can use the Present Perfect to describe things that started in the past and continue now:

Example #1

  • I came to work at 8 AM this morning.
  • Now, it is 1 PM. I'm at work now.
  • I've been at work since 8 AM this morning.

Example #2

  • It started raining two hours ago.
  • It's raining now.
  • It's been raining for two hours.

Example #3

  • I moved to Vancouver three months ago.
  • I am living in Vancouver now.
  • I've been living in Vancouver for three months.

Example #4

  • Kazu bought her phone six weeks ago.
  • She has the phone now.
  • She's had her phone for six weeks.

Simple or Continuous?

Present SimplePresent Perfect Simple

Chris has a red sports car. He's had the car for two years.

I know Frank. I've known him since we were kids.

We're married. We've been married for eight months.

Present ContinuousPresent Perfect Continuous

I'm studying in the library. I've been studying here for a few hours.

It's raining. It's been raining since 6.

We're working. We've been working for many hours.


How Long Have You...?

How long have you been here?

How long have they been studying English?

How long has it been raining?

Since & For


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Exercise

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