PRESENT PERFECT SIMPLE, To emphasise the result of a completed action (e.g., I have fixed the car—it works now)., To talk about permanent or long-term situations (e.g., She has lived in Madrid for ten years)., To talk about finished actions with a present result visible now (e.g., Someone has broken the window)., Finished actions, PRESENT PERFECT CONTINUOUS, To emphasise the duration or ongoing nature of an action , To indicate how much has been done as part of an ongoing process that may continue., To talk about actions that started in the past and are still happening, often with for or since, when the focus is on the action itself rather than a result., Unfinished actions.

PRESENT PERFECT: SIMPLE OR CONTINUOUS?

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