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Past Perfect Continuous (Past Perfect Progressive)

The Past Perfect Continuous tense shows that an action was ongoing in the past before another action or time. It emphasises the duration or continuity of the earlier activity.

We form the Past Perfect Continuous with had been + the -ing form of the verb. The same form is used for all subjects (I, you, he, she, it, we, they).

Formation

Positive Form

Form the Past Perfect Continuous with had been + verb-ing. Contractions ('d) are common in spoken English.

Full FormShort Form
I had been reading for an hourI'd been reading for an hour
You had been walking in the parkYou'd been walking in the park
He had been cooking dinnerHe'd been cooking dinner
She had been talking on the phoneShe'd been talking on the phone
It had been raining all morningIt'd been raining all morning
We had been playing footballWe'd been playing football
They had been studying English for yearsThey'd been studying English for years

Negative Form

Add 'not' after 'had' to form negatives. The contraction 'hadn't' is commonly used.

Full FormShort Form
I had not been reading for longI hadn't been reading for long
You had not been walking in the parkYou hadn't been walking in the park
He had not been cooking dinnerHe hadn't been cooking dinner
She had not been talking on the phoneShe hadn't been talking on the phone
It had not been raining all morningIt hadn't been raining all morning
We had not been playing footballWe hadn't been playing football
They had not been studying English for yearsThey hadn't been studying English for years

Yes/No Questions

Move 'had' before the subject to form questions.

Examples:

  • Had I been reading before you arrived?
  • Had you been walking in the park earlier?
  • Had he been cooking when the guests arrived?
  • Had she been talking on the phone for long?
  • Had it been raining all morning?
  • Had we been playing football before it started raining?
  • Had they been studying English for years before moving?

Wh- Questions

Begin with a question word, then use had + subject + been + verb-ing.

Examples:

  • What had I been doing before you called?
  • Where had you been walking?
  • Why had he been cooking for so long?
  • Who had she been talking to?
  • How long had it been raining?
  • What had we been playing before the rain?
  • How long had they been studying English?

Usage

Note: Stative verbs (such as know, like, believe, want) are not usually used in continuous forms. They describe states rather than actions.

Learn more about stative verbs

Practice Exercises


Quizzes for this lesson will be available soon. We are currently preparing the question set and will publish it as soon as possible.


Downloadable PDF


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