control tower

A: How long have you been studying in the control tower?

B: I started in January, so I've been here for two months.

Present Perfect Continuous

have or has + been + verb ~ing

Positive & Negative Sentences

I
You
We
They
have
have not / haven't
been writing
waiting
wearing
Airspace procedures for many years.
here for a long time.
headsets since ATC Academy.
He
She
It
has
has not / hasn't

Questions

Have I
You
We
They
been writing
waiting
wearing
Airspace procedures for many years?
here for a long time?
headsets since ATC Academy?
Has He
She
It

Use

How Long?

Another way to use the Present Perfect is to describe actions or situations that started in the past but are not finished. When we do this, we are often describing an action's duration: how long it has been happening. English speakers usually do this in the Present Perfect Continuous tense:

  • Mary has been working here since she was 22.
  • They have been studying ATC procedures for two months.
  • I have been learning to vector aircraft for a while.

Simple or Continuous?


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