Unit 2: Hidden talents
Present perfect continuous
Select a unit
- 1 Pop-ups
- 2 Hidden talents
- 3 Can't buy me love
- 4 Travellers' tales
- 5 The colleague from hell
- 6 Jurassic mystery: unpacking the past
- 7 Career changes
- 8 Art
- 9 Project management
- 10 The dog ate my homework!
- 11 The diary of a double agent
- 12 Fashion forward
- 13 Flat pack skyscrapers
- 14 Extreme sports
- 15 Food fads
- 16 Me, my selfie and I
- 17 Endangered animals
- 18 A nip and a tuck: cosmetic surgery
- 19 I'm really sorry...
- 20 Telling stories
- 21 Fakes and phrasals
- 22 Looking to the future
- 23 Becoming familiar with things
- 24 From rags to riches
- 25 Against the odds
- 26 Our future on Mars?
- 27 Where is it illegal to get a fish drunk?
- 28 Dodgy dating
- 29 Annoying advice
- 30 I'll have been studying English for thirty weeks
Session 2
Which tense is this: How long have you been learning English? It's the present perfect continuous - and that's what we're looking at in this session.
Activity 1
Long time no see!
Feeling tense?
In this activity we're looking at the present perfect continuous tense. It's the one we use to talk about:
1) Activities that started in the past and are continuing now
- We've been learning Spanish this year.
2) An activity which has recently finished
- Have you been smoking? I can smell smoke!
Read the text and complete the activity

To do
We'll explore the form further down this page. But instead of us just telling you the form, why don't you have a go at making it first?
In the activity, there are six sentences which you have to put into the correct order. All the sentences are about a reunion where classmates haven't seen each other for a long time. They're all in the present perfect continuous.
Make the present perfect continuous
4 Questions
Form sentences in the present perfect continuous tense
Help
Activity
Form sentences in the present perfect continuous tense
Hint
One of the two words 'lived' and 'living' is wrongQuestion 1 of 4
Help
Activity
Form sentences in the present perfect continuous tense
Hint
Remember, you need the present participleQuestion 2 of 4
Help
Activity
Form sentences in the present perfect continuous tense
Hint
You only need the main verb in the continuous formQuestion 3 of 4
Help
Activity
Form sentences in the present perfect continuous tense
Hint
The present perfect continuous always has 'been'Question 4 of 4
Excellent! Great job! Bad luck! You scored:
Did you get them all right? Now, let's have a look at the form.
Form
The present perfect continuous is made with:
Subject + have/has/haven't/hasn't + been + present participle of main verb
Positive
- Jack's working very hard for his exams. He's been revising all day.
- I've been working at the café for two weeks.
- You've been watching far too much telly for too long. Why don't you take up a new sport?
Negative
- I haven't been drinking coffee these last few days and my head is much clearer.
- Doctor, I've not been feeling good all the morning.
Question
Present perfect continuous questions are made with:
Have/has not + subject + been + present participle
- Have you been eating all the biscuits? There are none left!
- What have you been doing? You look exhausted!
Next
Well done. You've practised the form, but what's harder than that is knowing exactly when to use this tense. In the next activity, you'll look at situations and decide whether or not the present perfect continuous is appropriate.
Session Grammar
Present perfect continuous tense
Meaning and use
To talk about an activity that started in the past and is continuing now or has recently finished.
- I’ve been reading that new book you lent me…
Form - positive and negative
subject + have/has/haven’t/hasn’t + been + present participle of main verb
- He’s been revising all day
- I haven’t been drinking coffee recently
Form - question
- Have you been eating biscuits?