Had worked or had been working?

“She had worked for the previous five years with an advertising company” means that she had worked there for 5 years but was not working there anymore. “She had been working for the previous five years with an advertising company” means that she had worked there for 5 years and was still continuing to work there.

Had worked or had been working?

“She had worked for the previous five years with an advertising company” means that she had worked there for 5 years but was not working there anymore. “She had been working for the previous five years with an advertising company” means that she had worked there for 5 years and was still continuing to work there.

What is an example of a perfect tense?

One example of this tense is: “have jumped.” “Have” is the present tense and “jumped” is the past participle. Some other forms of this tense are: Has lived: She has lived here all her life.

What is the rule of past continuous and past perfect tense?

The past perfect continuous tense (also known as the past perfect progressive tense) shows that an action that started in the past continued up until another time in the past. The past perfect continuous tense is constructed using had been + the verb’s present participle (root + -ing).

What is past perfect simple tense?

The past perfect simple is used to describe one action that happened before another action in the past. In many cases a complete sentence is written in two parts with two different tenses: The past perfect simple, to refer to the action that happened first or earlier.

Had been and had being?

As a rule, the word “been” is always used after “to have” (in any of its forms, e.g., “has,” “had,” “will have,” “having”). Conversely, the word “being” is never used after “to have.” “Being” is used after “to be” (in any of its forms, e.g., “am,” “is,” “are,” “was,” “were”). Examples: I have been busy.

What do we use past perfect continuous for?

The past perfect continuous (also called past perfect progressive) is a verb tense which is used to show that an action started in the past and continued up to another point in the past.

When to use had or had been?

“had” and “had been” : They come into picture only when we are talking of two past actions and we want to show their chronology. Case 1: Use “had” when both the action are complete at the time of reference and one action completed before the other. Example: I had studied hard, so I did well in exam.