Language/English/Grammar/I-have-been-living-or-I-have-lived

From Polyglot Club WIKI
< Language‎ | English‎ | Grammar
Revision as of 12:16, 29 January 2022 by Vincent (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Rate this lesson:
4.25
(4 votes)

"I have been living" versus "I have lived"?
I have been living VS I have lived.png

Present Perfect Continuous

Example: "I've been living in Paris for 2 years"

This tense is called the "Present Perfect Continuous" (have been living).

It means I have lived there for 2 years and, by implication, that I'm going to continue to live there for at least the near future. I am going to continue living in Paris.

Present Perfect Simple

Example: "I've lived in Paris for 2 years"

This tense is called the "Present Perfect Simple" (have lived) and simply means from then until now I have lived there for 2 years and it doesn't indicate whether I intend to continue living in Paris.

Sources


Contributors

Vincent, Maintenance script and 43.242.122.136


Create a new Lesson