B1 Verb Tenses 16 min read Mittel

Present Perfect Continuous: Die Reise leben (have been -ing)

Du hast drei magische Werkzeuge: duration für die Länge, past und present für den Zusammenhang. Betone damit die Relevanz von Handlungen, die angefangen haben und jetzt immer noch wichtig sind.

Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds

Use this to describe actions that started in the past and are still happening now, emphasizing the duration or the process.

  • Use 'have/has been' + verb ending in '-ing' for ongoing actions. Example: 'I have been running.'
  • Focus on the activity itself, not just the finished result. Example: 'She has been painting the room.'
  • Often used with 'for' (duration) or 'since' (start point). Example: 'We have been waiting since 9 AM.'
👤 Subject + 🛠️ have/has + ⏳ been + 🏃 Verb-ing

Overview

### Overview
Stell dir vor, du sitzt in einem gemütlichen Café in Berlin-Mitte. Du wartest auf einen Freund, der mal wieder Verspätung hat. Du schaust auf die Uhr und denkst: „Ich warte hier schon seit zwanzig Minuten.“ Im Deutschen benutzen wir für diese Situation ganz einfach das Präsens (Gegenwart) in Kombination mit dem Wörtchen „seit“.
Im Englischen tickt die Grammatik-Uhr jedoch anders. Wenn wir ausdrücken wollen, dass eine Handlung in der Vergangenheit begonnen hat, bis in die Gegenwart andauert und wir dabei besonders betonen möchten, wie lange das Ganze schon geht oder wie intensiv die Tätigkeit ist, dann greifen wir zum Present Perfect Continuous (auch Present Perfect Progressive genannt).
Diese Zeitform ist die Brücke zwischen dem, was war, und dem, was jetzt gerade ist. Sie ist die „Erzähler-Zeit“ für Prozesse. Während das Present Perfect Simple (I have worked) oft das Ergebnis betont (Ich habe die Arbeit erledigt), stellt das Present Perfect Continuous (I have been working) den Weg, die Dauer und die Anstrengung in den Vordergrund.
Für uns deutsche Muttersprachler ist das oft eine kleine Umstellung, da wir im Kopf meistens direkt vom deutschen Präsens übersetzen wollen. Aber keine Sorge: Sobald du die Logik hinter der „Dauer“ verstehst, wird diese Zeitform dein Englisch massiv natürlicher klingen lassen. Es ist die Zeitform, die zeigt, dass du nicht nur Fakten aufzählst, sondern den Prozess dahinter verstehst.
### How This Grammar Works
Um zu verstehen, wie das Present Perfect Continuous funktioniert, müssen wir uns die drei Bausteine ansehen, aus denen es besteht. Es ist ein bisschen wie ein Legobausatz:
  1. 1Das Hilfsverb have oder has: Dies ist unser Anker in der Gegenwart. Es zeigt an, dass die Handlung eine Relevanz für das „Jetzt“ hat.
  2. 2Das Wörtchen been: Das ist das Partizip Perfekt von to be. Es fungiert als Bindeglied und signalisiert den „Perfect“-Aspekt.
  3. 3Die -ing-Form des Hauptverbs: Das ist das Herzstück der Kontinuität. Es zeigt uns, dass die Handlung im Fluss ist, also „progressive“ oder „continuous“.
Der Kontrast zum Deutschen:
Im Deutschen haben wir keine direkte Entsprechung für diese Verlaufsform. Wir sagen: „Ich lerne seit drei Jahren Englisch.“
Auf Englisch wäre ein Satz wie I learn English since three years grammatikalisch falsch (ein klassischer „Germanism“). Da die Handlung in der Vergangenheit begann und noch andauert, verlangt das Englische zwingend eine Perfect-Zeitform. Da es ein andauernder Prozess ist, ist das Present Perfect Continuous die eleganteste Wahl: I have been learning English for three years.
Warum machen die Engländer das so kompliziert? Weil sie präzise unterscheiden wollen: Geht es um das fertige Produkt oder um die investierte Zeit? Das Present Perfect Continuous ist die Zeitform der Empathie und der Anschaulichkeit.
Wenn du sagst I have been cleaning the kitchen, dann schwingt da mit: „Schau mich an, ich bin müde, ich habe Zeit investiert, und die Küche glänzt (oder ich bin noch dabei).“
### Formation Pattern
Die Bildung folgt einem sehr logischen und strengen Muster. Da das Englische im Gegensatz zum Deutschen keine komplexen Kasus-Endungen (der/die/das, des/dem/den) hat, ist die Struktur der Verben umso wichtiger.
Die Grundformel lautet:
Subject + have/has + been + Verb-ing
| Subjekt | Bejahend (Affirmative) | Verneinend (Negative) | Frage (Interrogative) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| I / You / We / They | I have been working | I haven't been working | Have I been working? |
| He / She / It | He has been working | He hasn't been working | Has he been working? |
Wichtige Details zur Bildung:
  • He, she, it, das 's' muss mit: Wie immer im Englischen nutzt die 3. Person Singular has statt have.
  • Kurzformen: In der gesprochenen Sprache und in informellen E-Mails oder WhatsApp-Chats nutzen wir fast immer Kurzformen: I've been..., You've been..., He's been....
  • Rechtschreibung bei -ing:
  • Verben auf -e: Das e fällt weg (make -> making).
  • Kurzer Vokal + Konsonant: Der Konsonant wird verdoppelt (run -> running, sit -> sitting).
Beispiele aus dem Alltag:
  • I've been waiting for the bus for 20 minutes. (Ich warte seit 20 Minuten auf den Bus – und stehe immer noch an der Haltestelle).
  • She hasn't been sleeping well lately. (Sie hat in letzter Zeit nicht gut geschlafen – ein anhaltender Zustand).
  • Have you been crying? (Hast du geweint? – Die Augen sind vielleicht noch rot, das Ergebnis ist sichtbar).
### When To Use It
Wann solltest du dich für diese Zeitform entscheiden? Es gibt vier Hauptszenarien, die für dich als B1-Lerner besonders wichtig sind:
1. Handlungen, die in der Vergangenheit begannen und bis jetzt andauern (Fokus auf Dauer)
Das ist der häufigste Fall. Oft erkennst du ihn an den Signalwörtern for (Zeitraum) und since (Zeitpunkt).
  • *Beispiel:* We have been living in this apartment since 2015.
  • *Warum?* Ihr seid 2015 eingezogen und wohnt immer noch dort. Der Fokus liegt auf der langen Zeitspanne.
2. Kürzlich abgeschlossene Handlungen mit sichtbaren Folgen im Jetzt
Hier ist die Handlung vielleicht gerade erst zu Ende gegangen, aber man sieht, hört oder fühlt das Ergebnis noch ganz deutlich.
  • *Szenario:* Du triffst einen Kollegen im Flur, der völlig außer Atem ist.
  • *Satz:* Have you been running? (Bist du gerade gelaufen?)
  • *Warum?* Er läuft jetzt nicht mehr, aber sein Keuchen und sein rotes Gesicht sind der Beweis für die vorangegangene kontinuierliche Tätigkeit.
3. Vorübergehende Gewohnheiten oder Situationen
Wenn etwas nicht „für immer“ so ist, sondern eine Phase beschreibt, die in letzter Zeit stattfindet.
  • *Beispiel:* I've been drinking too much coffee these days.
  • *Warum?* Normalerweise trinkst du vielleicht weniger, aber in dieser speziellen Woche (vielleicht wegen eines Projekts im Büro) ist es eine anhaltende Gewohnheit.
4. Um sich zu beschweren oder Erstaunen auszudrücken
Das Present Perfect Continuous eignet sich hervorragend, um eine gewisse Emotion in einen Satz zu legen.
  • *Beispiel:* Who has been eating my yogurt? (Wer hat von meinem Joghurt gegessen?)
  • *Warum?* Du siehst den halbleeren Becher im Kühlschrank. Die kontinuierliche Form betont hier die „Frechheit“ der andauernden oder wiederholten Handlung.
### Common Mistakes
Da unser deutsches Gehirn oft versucht, englische Sätze nach deutschen Regeln zu bauen, gibt es ein paar klassische Stolperfallen. Wenn du diese kennst, bist du den meisten anderen Lernern einen Schritt voraus.
Fehler 1: Das deutsche „seit“ mit since und Präsens übersetzen
  • *Falsch:* I am working here since two years.
  • *Richtig:* I have been working here for two years.
  • Warum passiert das? Im Deutschen sagen wir „Ich arbeite (Präsens) seit (since/for)“. Im Englischen ist das Präsens (I am working) aber nur für das reserviert, was *genau jetzt* passiert. Sobald eine Zeitdauer ins Spiel kommt, die in der Vergangenheit startete, musst du ins Present Perfect wechseln.
Fehler 2: for und since verwechseln
  • *Falsch:* I've been waiting since two hours.
  • *Richtig:* I've been waiting for two hours.
  • Merkhilfe:
  • For benutzt du für einen Zeitraum (eine Dauer): for 5 minutes, for ages, for a week.
  • Since benutzt du für einen festen Zeitpunkt (einen Startpunkt): since Monday, since 8 o'clock, since I was a child.
Fehler 3: Das Wörtchen been vergessen
  • *Falsch:* I have working all day.
  • *Richtig:* I have been working all day.
  • Warum passiert das? Manchmal konzentriert man sich so sehr auf das have und das -ing, dass die Mitte verloren geht. Ohne been ist der Satz aber grammatikalisch unvollständig. Denk an die „Drei-Säulen-Regel“: have + been + -ing.
Fehler 4: Zustandsverben (Stative Verbs) im Continuous nutzen
  • *Falsch:* I've been knowing him for years.
  • *Richtig:* I've known him for years.
  • Warum? Es gibt Verben, die keinen Prozess beschreiben, sondern einen Zustand (z.B. know, believe, like, hate, belong). Diese Verben mögen keine -ing-Form. In diesem Fall musst du auf das Present Perfect Simple ausweichen.
### Contrast With Similar Patterns
Besonders die Unterscheidung zwischen dem Present Perfect Simple und dem Present Perfect Continuous fällt vielen schwer. Hier ist eine Übersicht, die dir hilft, die richtige Wahl zu treffen:
| Merkmal | Present Perfect Simple | Present Perfect Continuous |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Fokus | Das Ergebnis / Das fertige Produkt | Die Tätigkeit / Der Prozess |
| Frage | How much? / How many? (Wie viel?) | How long? (Wie lange?) |
| Zustand | Permanent / Abgeschlossen | Vorübergehend / Noch im Gang |
| Beispiel 1 | I have written three emails. (3 E-Mails sind fertig im Postausgang.) | I have been writing emails all morning. (Ich war den ganzen Morgen damit beschäftigt.) |
| Beispiel 2 | She has repaired the car. (Das Auto fährt wieder.) | She has been repairing the car. (Sie hat ölige Hände; man sieht, dass sie gearbeitet hat.) |
Ein kleiner Tipp für die Praxis: Wenn du betonen willst, wie fleißig du warst oder wie sehr dich etwas Zeit gekostet hat, nimm die -ing-Form. Wenn du deinem Chef einfach nur sagen willst, dass die Aufgabe erledigt ist, nimm die Simple-Form.
### Quick FAQ
1. Kann ich Present Perfect Continuous auch ohne Zeitangabe wie for oder since benutzen?
Ja, absolut! Wenn du sagst I've been thinking about you, dann meinst du „in letzter Zeit“ oder „gerade eben noch“. Die Zeitangabe schwingt im Kontext oft mit, auch wenn sie nicht explizit genannt wird.
2. Gibt es einen Unterschied zwischen I've been living und I've lived?
Bei Verben wie live (wohnen) oder work (arbeiten) ist der Unterschied oft minimal. Beides ist korrekt. I've been living here klingt jedoch etwas dynamischer und betont das aktuelle Wohnen, während I've lived here eher wie eine feste Tatsache klingt.
3. Was mache ich bei Verben wie stop oder start?
Diese Verben beschreiben punktuelle Ereignisse. Man kann nicht „stoppend sein“ über einen langen Zeitraum. Hier nutzt du fast immer das Present Perfect Simple: The rain has stopped. (Nicht: The rain has been stopping.)
4. Warum klingt I have been having a car falsch?
Weil have in der Bedeutung von „besitzen“ ein Zustandsverb ist. Zustände haben keinen Verlauf. Richtig ist: I have had my car for two years. Wenn have aber Teil einer Aktivität ist (z.B.
having a shower oder having a good time), dann darfst du die -ing-Form benutzen: I've been having a great time at the party!

Conjugating 'To Work'

Subject Auxiliary Been Verb + -ing
I
have
been
working
You
have
been
working
He/She/It
has
been
working
We
have
been
working
They
have
been
working

Common Contractions

Full Form Contraction Negative Contraction
I have been
I've been
I haven't been
You have been
You've been
You haven't been
He has been
He's been
He hasn't been
She has been
She's been
She hasn't been
It has been
It's been
It hasn't been
We have been
We've been
We haven't been
They have been
They've been
They haven't been

Meanings

A verb tense used to show that an action started in the past and has continued up to the present moment, or has just finished and has a visible result in the present.

1

Duration from the past until now

Emphasizing how long an activity has been happening.

“They have been living in London since 2010.”

“How long have you been playing the guitar?”

2

Recent activity with present evidence

An action that recently stopped but we can see the effects right now.

“You're out of breath! Have you been running?”

“The ground is wet because it has been raining.”

3

Temporary habits or situations

Actions that are happening repeatedly over a period of time lately.

“I've been eating a lot of junk food recently.”

“He's been seeing a lot of his friends lately.”

Reference Table

Reference table for Present Perfect Continuous: Die Reise leben (have been -ing)
Verwendung Struktur Beispiel Fokus
Andauernde Handlung
Subject + have/has + been + V-ing
She's been studying since noon.
Dauer, Kontinuität
Jüngstes Ergebnis
Subject + have/has + been + V-ing
Your eyes are red; have you been crying?
Beweis einer vergangenen Handlung
Dauer (for/since)
Subject + have/has + been + V-ing
We've been living here for years.
Zeitspanne
Negative Handlung
Subject + have/has + not + been + V-ing
I haven't been feeling well.
Fehlen einer andauernden Handlung
Frage nach Dauer
Have/Has + Subject + been + V-ing?
How long have they been waiting?
Nach der Zeit fragen

Formalitätsspektrum

Formell
I apologize; I have been attending to an urgent matter.

I apologize; I have been attending to an urgent matter. (Apologizing for lateness)

Neutral
Sorry, I've been dealing with some stuff.

Sorry, I've been dealing with some stuff. (Apologizing for lateness)

Informell
Sorry! I've been tied up.

Sorry! I've been tied up. (Apologizing for lateness)

Umgangssprache
My bad, I've been running around like crazy.

My bad, I've been running around like crazy. (Apologizing for lateness)

Present Perfect Continuous: Die Reise

Present Perfect Continuous

Hauptanwendungen

  • Andauernde Handlungen Begonnen in der Vergangenheit, dauert bis jetzt an
  • Jüngste Ergebnisse Aktion gerade beendet, Beweis jetzt sichtbar
  • Dauer Fokus auf 'wie lange'

Schlüsselelemente

  • Hilfsverb have / has
  • Partizip been
  • Hauptverb -ing Form

Zeitangaben

  • For Zeitspanne
  • Since Startpunkt
  • Recently/Lately Aktueller Zeitraum

PPC vs. PPS: Prozess vs. Ergebnis

Present Perfect Continuous
I've been reading this book. Betonung auf der andauernden Handlung.
She's been cooking all day. Fokus auf den Prozess und die Dauer.
It's been raining. Der Boden ist nass (Ergebnis), aber der Fokus liegt auf der Dauer des Regens.
Present Perfect Simple
I've read this book. Betonung auf der abgeschlossenen Handlung/dem Ergebnis.
She's cooked dinner. Fokus auf das fertige Produkt.
It has rained. Es hat geregnet (Fakt), vielleicht nur einmal oder kurz.

Die richtige Zeitform wählen: PPC?

1

Hat die Handlung in der Vergangenheit begonnen?

YES
Gehe zum nächsten Schritt
NO
Kein PPC
2

Dauert die Handlung jetzt noch an?

YES
Verwende Present Perfect Continuous
NO
Gehe zum nächsten Schritt
3

Ist die Handlung gerade erst beendet, aber ihre Ergebnisse sind jetzt sichtbar/spürbar?

YES
Verwende Present Perfect Continuous
NO
Erwäge Past Simple oder Present Perfect Simple

PPC im modernen Leben

📱

Soziale Medien

  • I've been scrolling for hours!
  • What have you been watching?
💻

Arbeit/Studium

  • We've been collaborating on the report.
  • I've been preparing for my exam.

Alltag

  • I've been exercising a lot lately.
  • She's been waiting for her order.

Situationen erklären

  • Why are you tired? I've been studying.
  • Why is the road closed? They've been fixing it.

Beispiele nach Niveau

1

I have been playing.

I have been playing.

2

She has been eating.

She has been eating.

3

We have been walking.

We have been walking.

4

They have been sleeping.

They have been sleeping.

1

I have been waiting for one hour.

I have been waiting for one hour.

2

He has been living here since May.

He has been living here since May.

3

Have you been crying?

Have you been crying?

4

It has not been raining today.

It has not been raining today.

1

I've been trying to fix this computer all morning.

I've been trying to fix this computer all morning.

2

She's been working out a lot lately, hasn't she?

She's been working out a lot lately, hasn't she?

3

How long have they been dating?

How long have they been dating?

4

We haven't been getting much sleep since the baby was born.

We haven't been getting much sleep since the baby was born.

1

The company has been struggling to maintain its market share.

The company has been struggling to maintain its market share.

2

I've been meaning to tell you about the change in plans.

I've been meaning to tell you about the change in plans.

3

He has been constantly complaining about the noise.

He has been constantly complaining about the noise.

4

Scientists have been researching this phenomenon for decades.

Scientists have been researching this phenomenon for decades.

1

The government has been underplaying the significance of the crisis.

The government has been underplaying the significance of the crisis.

2

I've been agonizing over which career path to choose.

I've been agonizing over which career path to choose.

3

Tensions have been simmering between the two factions for months.

Tensions have been simmering between the two factions for months.

4

She has been tirelessly advocating for environmental reform.

She has been tirelessly advocating for environmental reform.

1

The philosophical implications of this theory have been being debated since its inception.

The philosophical implications of this theory have been being debated since its inception.

2

He has been masquerading as a qualified doctor for years.

He has been masquerading as a qualified doctor for years.

3

The architecture has been slowly yielding to the ravages of time.

The architecture has been slowly yielding to the ravages of time.

4

I've been wrestling with the existential dread that often accompanies such realizations.

I've been wrestling with the existential dread that often accompanies such realizations.

Leicht verwechselbar

Present Perfect Continuous: Living the Journey (have been -ing) vs. Present Perfect Simple

Learners often use the Simple form when they want to emphasize the duration, or vice versa.

Present Perfect Continuous: Living the Journey (have been -ing) vs. Present Continuous

Learners use 'I am working' to mean 'I have been working'.

Present Perfect Continuous: Living the Journey (have been -ing) vs. Past Continuous

Mixing up 'I was working' with 'I have been working'.

Häufige Fehler

I have working.

I have been working.

You forgot the 'been'. The continuous perfect always needs 'been'.

She has been work.

She has been working.

You forgot the '-ing'.

I have been being happy.

I have been happy.

'Be' is a stative verb here; don't use -ing.

They has been playing.

They have been playing.

Subject-verb agreement: 'They' takes 'have'.

I have been knowing him for years.

I have known him for years.

'Know' is a stative verb. It cannot be continuous.

I have been living here since two years.

I have been living here for two years.

Use 'for' for a duration of time.

How long you have been waiting?

How long have you been waiting?

In questions, the auxiliary 'have' must come before the subject.

I've been cutting my finger.

I've cut my finger.

Cutting a finger is a momentary action, not a continuous process (unless you are doing it repeatedly on purpose!).

I've been reading this book three times.

I've read this book three times.

When you mention the number of times (quantity), use the Simple form.

He's been having a car since 2020.

He's had a car since 2020.

'Have' meaning possession is stative.

The house has been being built for ages.

The house has been under construction for ages.

While grammatically possible, the passive present perfect continuous is extremely clunky and avoided by natives.

Satzmuster

I have been ___ing for ___.

Have you been ___ing lately?

It has been ___ing since ___.

I haven't been ___ing much recently because ___.

Real World Usage

Netflix Binging very common

I've been watching this show all weekend.

Job Interviews common

I've been working in the tech industry for over a decade.

Customer Support very common

I've been trying to reach your department since yesterday.

Weather Talk constant

It's been raining non-stop lately.

Social Media Updates common

I've been traveling through Southeast Asia and loving every minute!

Doctor's Appointment occasional

I've been having these headaches for about a week.

💡

Vorsicht bei Zustandsverben!

Denk daran, Verben, die Zustände beschreiben (wie know, believe, understand), werden normalerweise nicht in der Verlaufsform benutzt. Bleib beim Present Perfect Simple für sie, zum Beispiel: "I've known him anstatt I've been knowing him".
⚠️

'Been' nicht vergessen!

Es ist super einfach, been wegzulassen, wenn du schnell sprichst. Aber es ist essenziell, um das Present Perfect Continuous zu bilden. Überprüfe immer deine Struktur:
have/has + been + verb-ing
.
🎯

Kontext ist alles

Bei dieser Zeitform geht es darum, vergangene Handlungen mit der Gegenwart zu verbinden. Wenn du die Ergebnisse einer Handlung sehen oder spüren kannst, oder wenn eine Handlung noch andauert, ist PPC wahrscheinlich dein Freund. Denk an das 'Warum jetzt?'. Zum Beispiel, wenn jemand müde ist, weil
He has been running.
🌍

Kling natürlicher mit Kontraktionen

Im informellen Englisch (was das meiste ist!) benutzen wir fast immer Kontraktionen wie "I've been«, »she's been«, »they haven't been". Wenn du sie benutzt, klingst du viel flüssiger und natürlicher!
💡

Dauer betonen

Wenn du betonen möchtest, 'wie lange' etwas schon passiert, ist das Present Perfect Continuous perfekt! Kombiniere es mit for (z.B. for three hours) oder since (z.B. since morning) um die Dauer zu unterstreichen. Zum Beispiel: "I've been waiting for ages!"

Smart Tips

Use the Present Perfect Continuous to highlight the effort you've put in.

I worked all day. I've been working all day!

Ask a question using 'Have you been...?' to sound like a native detective.

Why are you dirty? Have you been gardening?

Almost always use the Continuous form to show that your learning journey is still happening.

I have learned English for a year. I've been learning English for a year.

Stop! If it's a number (2, 5, 10), use 'for'. If it's a name (Monday, July, 2021), use 'since'.

I've been here since five years. I've been here for five years.

Aussprache

/ɪv bɪn ˈwɜːkɪŋ/

The 'Been' Reduction

In natural speech, 'been' is rarely pronounced like 'bean' /biːn/. It is usually reduced to a short /bɪn/ (rhymes with 'bin').

I've been STUDYING.

Contraction Stress

The stress usually falls on the main verb, not the 'have' or 'been'.

Rising-Falling for Statements

I've been ↗waiting for ↘hours.

Conveys a sense of duration or slight frustration.

Einprägen

Eselsbrücke

Remember 'H.B.I.' — Have Been Ing. It sounds like a buzzing bee (been) that keeps going and going!

Visuelle Assoziation

Imagine a runner on a treadmill. They started 30 minutes ago (past), they are still running (present), and they are sweaty (result). This is the perfect image for 'have been running'.

Rhyme

If the action's still in view, 'have been -ing' is for you!

Story

Leo started painting his room at 8 AM. It is now 2 PM. He is covered in blue spots. He says, 'I have been painting all day!' The blue spots are the evidence, and the 6 hours are the duration.

Word Web

DurationProcessSinceForLatelyRecentlyOngoingEvidence

Herausforderung

Look around your room. Find one thing that shows evidence of a recent action (e.g., a half-empty cup of tea). Say out loud: 'I have been drinking tea.'

Kulturelle Hinweise

In some UK dialects, you might hear 'I've been sat here' instead of 'I've been sitting here'. While common in speech, it is considered non-standard in writing.

Americans often use the Present Perfect Continuous to emphasize the 'lately' aspect of a habit more than the 'since' aspect.

This tense is crucial for 'Status Updates'. Using it shows that a project is active and progress is being made, which sounds more proactive than the simple past.

The English 'perfect' system developed from Old English 'habban' (to have) + a past participle. The continuous aspect (-ing) was added later in Middle English to express ongoingness.

Gesprächseinstiege

What have you been doing for fun lately?

Have you been following the news recently?

How long have you been living in your current city?

You look great! Have you been doing something different with your routine?

Tagebuch-Impulse

Write about a hobby you started recently. How long have you been doing it and what have you been learning?
Describe your typical work or study week lately. What projects have you been working on?
Reflect on a long-term goal. How long have you been pursuing it, and what challenges have you been facing?
Discuss a global issue that has been developing over the last decade. How have people been reacting to it?

Häufige Fehler

Incorrect

Richtig


Incorrect

Richtig


Incorrect

Richtig


Incorrect

Richtig

Test Yourself

Wähle die richtige Verbform, um den Satz zu vervollständigen.

She ___ (wait) for the bus for twenty minutes.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: has been waiting
Das Subjekt 'She' benötigt 'has'. Die Handlung begann in der Vergangenheit und dauert an, was auf das Present Perfect Continuous hinweist.
Finde und korrigiere den Fehler im Satz. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

They are been playing video games all afternoon.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: They have been playing video games all afternoon.
Das Hilfsverb für das Present Perfect Continuous mit 'They' ist 'have', nicht 'are'.
Welcher Satz verwendet das Present Perfect Continuous korrekt? Multiple Choice

Wähle den korrekten Satz:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: How long have you known him?
'Know' ist ein Zustandsverb und wird typischerweise nicht in Verlaufsformen verwendet. Das Present Perfect Simple ist hier korrekt.
Gib den korrekten englischen Satz ein. Übersetzung

Übersetze ins Englische: 'Ella ha estado durmiendo desde las diez.'

Answer starts with: ["S...

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: ["She has been sleeping since ten.","She's been sleeping since ten o'clock."]
Das spanische 'ha estado durmiendo' bedeutet direkt 'has been sleeping' und weist auf eine Handlung hin, die von einem bestimmten Zeitpunkt an andauert ('since ten').

Score: /4

Ubungsaufgaben

8 exercises
Fill in the blank with the correct form of the verb in parentheses.

I ___ (wait) for the bus for thirty minutes.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: have been waiting
The sentence uses 'for thirty minutes', which requires the Present Perfect Continuous to show duration.
Which sentence is correct? Multiple Choice

Select the grammatically correct sentence.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: I have known her since childhood.
'Know' is a stative verb and cannot be used in the continuous form.
Find the error in the sentence. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

She has been work here for five years.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: work
The verb must be in the -ing form: 'working'.
Change the Present Simple sentence to Present Perfect Continuous using the time in brackets. Sentence Transformation

He plays tennis. (since 2 o'clock)

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: He has been playing tennis since 2 o'clock.
To show an action started in the past and continues, use have/has been -ing.
Complete the dialogue. Dialogue Completion

A: Your eyes are red. B: Yes, I ___ (chop) onions.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: have been chopping
The red eyes are present evidence of a recently finished continuous activity.
Which of these verbs CANNOT be used in the Present Perfect Continuous? Grammar Sorting

Identify the stative verb.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Believe
'Believe' is a state of mind, not an action, so it doesn't take the -ing form.
Put the words in the correct order. Sentence Building

lately / been / working / hard / they / have

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: They have been working hard lately.
The standard order is Subject + have/has + been + V-ing + Adverb.
Match the situation to the sentence. Match Pairs

Situation: The kitchen is a mess and smells like flour.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: I have been baking.
The mess is evidence of the process of baking.

Score: /8

Practice Bank

12 exercises
Vervollständige den Satz mit der korrekten Present Perfect Continuous Form. Lückentext

It ___ (rain) non-stop for two days.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: has been raining
Korrigiere den Fehler im folgenden Satz. Error Correction

My phone is dead because I've been forgot to charge it.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: My phone is dead because I've forgotten to charge it.
Wähle den Satz, der das Present Perfect Continuous korrekt verwendet. Multiple Choice

Welcher Satz ist korrekt?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: They have known each other for years.
Übersetze den Satz ins Englische. Übersetzung

Übersetze ins Englische: '¿Cuánto tiempo llevas estudiando alemán?'

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: ["How long have you been studying German?","How long have you been learning German?"]
Bringe die Wörter in die richtige Reihenfolge, um einen Satz zu bilden. Sentence Reorder

Ordne diese Wörter zu einem Satz an:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: The team has been doing research all morning.
Ordne die Subjekte dem richtigen Anfang der Present Perfect Continuous Form zu. Match Pairs

Ordne die Subjekte zu, um die Sätze zu vervollständigen:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: matched
Wähle die beste Verbform. Lückentext

My eyes hurt because I ___ (read) on my tablet too much.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: have been reading
Identifiziere und korrigiere den Grammatikfehler. Error Correction

Sorry I'm late; I have been waiting for my friend to show up.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Sorry I'm late; I've been waiting for my friend to show up.
Wähle den grammatisch korrekten Satz. Multiple Choice

Welcher Satz ist korrekt?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: She's been teaching English for ten years.
Übersetze den Satz ins Englische. Übersetzung

Übersetze ins Englische: 'Hemos estado buscando un nuevo apartamento por tres meses.'

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: ["We have been looking for a new apartment for three months.","We've been looking for a new apartment for three months."]
Entschlüssele die Wörter, um einen aussagekräftigen Satz zu bilden. Sentence Reorder

Ordne diese Wörter zu einem Satz an:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: She has been working all night.
Ordne die Satzanfänge ihren korrekten Present Perfect Continuous Endungen zu. Match Pairs

Ordne die Satzteile zu:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: matched

Score: /12

FAQ (8)

Yes! For permanent situations, both are often okay: `I've lived here` and `I've been living here` mean almost the same thing. However, use Continuous for temporary situations.

Use `for` with a duration (e.g., `for 20 minutes`, `for 5 years`). Use `since` with a specific starting point (e.g., `since 9 AM`, `since Monday`, `since I was a child`).

Because `know` is a stative verb. Stative verbs describe states, not actions. English grammar rules forbid using these in any continuous (-ing) tense.

It is always `I've been`. `Being` is the present participle, but the formula requires the past participle of 'be', which is `been`.

Yes! If the action has just finished and there is a result you can see, hear, or feel now, use the Present Perfect Continuous.

Move 'have' or 'has' to the front: `Have you been studying?` or `Has it been raining?`.

Many languages use the simple present for this. For example, French and German speakers often make mistakes here because they don't have a direct equivalent.

It is neutral. It is used in both casual conversation and formal writing. In very formal writing, avoid the contraction: `I have been`.

Scaffolded Practice

1

1

2

2

3

3

4

4

Mastery Progress

Needs Practice

Improving

Strong

Mastered

In Other Languages

Spanish moderate

Llevar + gerundio / Presente + desde hace

English uses the 'have been' auxiliary, while Spanish uses 'llevar' or the simple present.

French low

Présent + depuis

English requires the Perfect aspect to show the connection to the past; the simple present is incorrect for duration.

German low

Präsens + seit

German has no continuous aspect, so the distinction between 'I have waited' and 'I have been waiting' doesn't exist in the same way.

Japanese moderate

~te iru (~ている)

Japanese doesn't distinguish between 'I am doing' and 'I have been doing' with different tenses; it relies on time adverbs.

Arabic partial

Kana (كان) + Mudari' (مضارع)

Arabic lacks a direct 'perfect' auxiliary equivalent to 'have'.

Chinese none

Verb + le (了) + zhe (着) / yizhi (一直)

Chinese has no verb conjugation for tense; it uses particles to show if an action is ongoing.

Learning Path

Prerequisites

Was this helpful?
Noch keine Kommentare. Sei der Erste, der seine Gedanken teilt!