It's the past perfect continuous tense.
Past tense.
"Has been" is actually the present perfect tense.
Future perfect tense.
Present perfect tense - have/has gone. Present perfect continuous tense - have/has been going. Past perfect tense - had gone. Past perfect continuous tense - had been going. Future perfect tense - will have gone. Future perfect continuous tense - will have been going.
"Had been" is the past perfect tense of be.
The past perfect progressive tense of work is "had been working".
The present tense of work is work (I work, you work, he works, she works, it works, we work they work). The present continuous - am/is/are working; the present perfect - have/has worked; the present perfect continuous - have/has been working.
the difference is simple had been working is past tense so i had been working but i broke my leg that means you do not work any more have been working means you are working just not rite now hope this helps
No, it's the present perfect continuous tense. It follows this structure: Subject + Have/Has + Been + Present Participle.
The past perfect progressive tense of work is "had been working".
The past perfect progressive tense of work is "had been working".
Yes, the sentence 'He has been working all day' is in the present perfect continuous tense.
The future perfect continuous tense is "you will have been working hard last year"
The way to figure this out is: Past tense verbs are about something that has happened but is now over. Present tense verbs are about something that is happening now. Future tense verbs are about something that has not happened yet but will happen in the future. So which one would "is working" fit into? Here's an example sentence: Bob is working. Now is that saying Bob will be working in the future? No. So it is not future tense. Is it saying Bob did work but is no longer working now? No. So it is not past tense. That leaves present tense. "Bob is working" is saying that he is working now. So it is present tense.
this is future progressive i hate tenses. why can't there just be past, present, and future
The future tense of "have been" is "will have been."
The past tense is worked. The present tense is work/works/working.