You can also combine the continuous and perfect tenses. To have must always appear first, followed by the past participle been. The present participle of any verb can then follow. Such perfect continuous tenses indicate that the verb started in the past and is still continuing: Present: It has been working. Past: It had been working.
The continuous tense is used to show an action that is, was, or will be happening at a specific time in the present, past or future. The continuous tense is formed with the appropriate tense of the verb to be and the present participle of the verb (base form of the verb + ing).
The present continuous is a verb tense in which the action is on-going/still going on and hence continuous. The present continuous tense is used to talk about actions that are happening at this current moment.
This tense is formed using the auxiliary verb "had" plus the past participle of the verb "be" (been) plus the -ing form of the main verb. We'll learn how to make positive and negative forms, short forms (contractions) and questions. [Note: Click here to learn how to use the past perfect continuous.]
What Is the Present Perfect Progressive Tense? The present perfect progressive tense has two uses. It is used for: A continuous activity that began in the past and continues into the present. For example: Those workmen have been fixing the roads. A continuous activity that began in past but has now finished (usually very recently). For example:
lLUVb.
what is continuous tense with examples