Present Perfect vs. Present Perfect Progressive — Lückentext 1

Entscheide: Present Perfect Simple oder Present Perfect Progressive?

B1 Lückentext

Setze das Verb in Klammern in der richtigen Form ein. Entscheide, ob Present Perfect Simple oder Present Perfect Progressive verwendet werden muss. Das Present Perfect Progressive betont den andauernden Prozess, das Present Perfect Simple das Ergebnis oder die Anzahl der Abschlüsse.

Aufgabe

  1. She three cups of coffee this morning. (drink)
    → She has drunk three cups of coffee this morning. (zählbares Ergebnis, abgeschlossene Anzahl → Present Perfect)
  2. He in the garden all afternoon — look how dirty his hands are! (work)
    → He has been working in the garden all afternoon — look how dirty his hands are! (all afternoon = anhaltender Prozess mit sichtbarer Folge → Present Perfect Progressive)
  3. I just my homework. (finish)
    → I have just finished my homework. (just = soeben abgeschlossen → Present Perfect)
  4. She for the bus for half an hour. (wait)
    → She has been waiting for the bus for half an hour. (for = andauernder Prozess seit einer Zeitspanne → Present Perfect Progressive)
  5. They already that film. (see)
    → They have already seen that film. (already = bereits abgeschlossen → Present Perfect)
  6. He English since he was ten. (study)
    → He has been studying English since he was ten. (since = andauernder Prozess seit einem Zeitpunkt → Present Perfect Progressive)
  7. I never sushi before. (try)
    → I have never tried sushi before. (never = Lebenser­fahrung, kein andauernder Vorgang → Present Perfect)
  8. We here for five years. (live)
    → We have been living here for five years. (for = anhaltender Prozess über eine Zeitspanne → Present Perfect Progressive)
  9. She the report — she can tell you what it says. (read)
    → She has read the report — she can tell you what it says. (abgeschlossenes Ergebnis mit Auswirkung auf die Gegenwart → Present Perfect)
  10. He — his face is red and he is out of breath. (run)
    → He has been running — his face is red and he is out of breath. (sichtbare Folge eines gerade beendeten Prozesses → Present Perfect Progressive)
  11. They not from him yet. (hear)
    → They have not heard from him yet. (yet = bis jetzt noch nicht abgeschlossen → Present Perfect)
  12. How long you German? (learn)
    → How long have you been learning German? (How long = Frage nach der Dauer eines andauernden Prozesses → Present Perfect Progressive)
Du möchtest das lieber mit einem Dozenten gemeinsam durcharbeiten? Bei Lernstabil erklären wir dir das persönlich — in deinem eigenen Tempo.