I _______ (finish) my homework.
have finished - focus on the result
I have lived here ___ 2010.
since — used with a starting point in time.
She has went to Paris twice.
Should be 'has gone' — the past participle of go is gone, not went.
Stative verbs like 'know', 'believe', and 'own' aren't usually used in continuous forms.
True — stative verbs describe states, not ongoing actions.
A: Why are you out of breath?
B: I ____ (run).
have been running — the activity explains a present physical result.
She ____ (study) English for six years.
has been studying — ongoing action, emphasis on duration.
She has been working here ___ five years.
for — used with a length of time.
Have you ever went to Japan?
Should be 'Have you ever been to Japan?' — past participle needed after have.
Present perfect continuous emphasizes the completion of an action rather than its duration.
False — it emphasizes duration or repetition of an ongoing process.
A: Wow, this kitchen is spotless!
B: Yes, I ____ (clean) all morning.
have been cleaning — ongoing effort explains the result.
I ____ (read) that book three times.
have read — repeated, countable completed actions use the simple form.
They haven't spoken ___ the argument.
since — the argument is the starting point.
He has been finished his homework.
Should be 'He has finished his homework' — completed result uses the simple form, not continuous.
'I've broken my leg' uses the simple form because we're focused on the result, not the duration.
True — the broken leg is the result that matters right now.
A: Is the report ready?
B: Yes, I ____ (finish) it.
have finished — focus on the completed task.
We ____ (paint) the fence — look, it's all done!
have painted — completed action, visible result.
He has been waiting ___ two hours.
for — a duration, not a starting point.
I am living here since 2015.
Should be 'I have been living here since 2015' — since needs a perfect form, not present continuous.
We can use present perfect continuous with exact quantities, like 'I've been writing three emails'.
False — exact quantities pair with the simple form: 'I've written three emails.'
A: How long ____ you ____ (wait)?
have you been waiting — asking about duration of an ongoing action.
Your eyes are red. ____ (you / cry)?
Have you been crying? — continuous, recent activity with a visible effect.
We have known each other ___ we were children.
since — introduces a clause marking the starting point.
I have been knowing him for years.
Should be 'I have known him for years' — 'know' is a stative verb and isn't used in continuous forms.
'Have you been waiting long?' means exactly the same as 'Have you waited long?'
False — the continuous form draws more attention to the ongoing wait itself.
A: I can't believe it! You ____ (win) the lottery!
have won — a completed, single result.