English, asked by monalkumar52, 1 year ago

present perfect progressive​

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Answered by Anonymous
7

The PRESENT PERFECT PROGRESSIVE TENSE indicates a continuous action that has been finished at some point in the past or that was initiated in the past and continues to happen. The action is usually of limited duration and has some current relevance: "She has been running and her heart is still beating fast." The present perfect progressive frequently is used to describe an event of the recent past; it is often accompanied by just in this usage: "It has just been raining."

This tense is formed with the modal "HAVE" or "HAS" (for third-person singular subjects) plus "BEEN," plus the present participle of the verb (with an -ing ending): "I have been working in the garden all morning. George has been painting that house for as long as I can remember."

here is your answers now you can only fill !! can you ???


monalkumar52: fill in the blanks complate karna hai
komalchoudhary53900: ha to kar to diye
Anonymous: you cannot fill
Anonymous: i have gave you the definition
Anonymous: because I only believe that if we do something by ourselves it is more beneficial
Answered by komalchoudhary53900
7
hola mate
here is ur answer
1=has been watching movie
2=has been cooking porridge
3=has been helping her mother
4=has been reading a book
thanks

komalchoudhary53900: pls mark aa brainliest
monalkumar52: right hai n
komalchoudhary53900: unke hi amswers hai 1,2,3,4
komalchoudhary53900: ha right hai
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komalchoudhary53900: and mark my answer as brianliest
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