it was Swinburne who called Shelly as "perfect singing god"
Percy Bysshe Shelley has been called the "perfect singing god" by individuals like George Meredith, a Victorian poet and novelist. Meredith referenced Shelley's lyrical and musical poetic qualities in comparing him to a divine being of artistic expression.
S t Coleridge
"Has been singing" is in the present perfect progressive tense. "Is singing" is the present progressive tense.
Subject + had + been + present participle For example, I had been singing.
Subject + had + been + present participle For example, I had been singing.
They are not perfect spheres. If they were, they would have been called spherical, not elliptical!
Erm theres this thing called wikipeadia
The present perfect continuous tense is used to describe an action that has just recently stopped or an action that is continuing up to now.It follows this structure:Subject + Auxiliary Verb 'Has/Have' + Auxiliary Verb 'Been' + Present Participle.For example:I have been walking.She has been singing.
Natasha has been singing since she was little. She was in a church choir when she was a teenager and was in a band called DNA Algorithm with her older brother Daniel and her younger sister Nikola.
she has been singing till she was 12
Jedward have been singing do about a year and half.
she has been singing for 7 years
present perfect continuous ( note spelling) = have/has +been + -ing verb have been waiting / has been sitting / have been talking / has been expecting past perfect continuous = had + been + ing verb had been waiting / had been sitting / had been expecting. -ing verb is called a present participle
Perfect tenses of expect:Present perfect - have/has expected.Present perfect continuous - have/has been expecting.Past perfect - had expected.Past perfect continuous - had been expecting.Future perfect - will have expected.Future perfect continuous - will have been expecting.Perfect tenses of intend:Present perfect - have/has intended.Present perfect continuous - have/has been intending.Past perfect - had intended.Past perfect continuous - had been intending.Future perfect - will have intended.Future perfect continuous - will have been intending.