Past Perfect Continuous Tense — Exercise 8 (Q&A with Solution’s Explanation and Enrich English with Vocabulary like British)

This practice test trains you to recognize and use the Past Perfect Continuous Tense (had + been + verb-ing form) in real contexts. Each question includes the correct past-perfect-continuous form, a short verb definition like in Oxford and Cambridge dictionary (vocabulary builder + POS notes), and detailed one-sentence explanations for every option (A–D) that tell why the option is correct or incorrect and what choosing it would mean. Practice, prepare and improve both English grammar and vocabulary.

English Grammar Definition: Past Perfect Continuous (had + been + verb-ing form)

  • Form: had + been + verb-ing form.
  • Examples: She had been polishing; They had been coming; Had you been starting it before?
  • Main uses:
    • To show an action was ongoing up to a past moment or before another past action.
    • To emphasise duration or repeated activity before something in the past.
  • Signal words: for X time, since, before, by the time, until, prior to, when.
  • Negatives / Questions: had not (hadn’t) + been + V-ing; Had + subject + been + V-ing?
  • To learn more about it – Visit Here

Quiz Instructions

  1. Read each question and choose the best answer out of four given options.
  2. On top, header section of the quiz, you will see the “title of the quiz,’ ‘spending-time,’ ‘value of question in points,’ and ‘number of questions.”
  3. Below on footer, you will see Full Screen mode. As the name suggests, it covers the whole screen. It will save a lot of your time attempting the quiz.
  4. You can zoom the images given in the questions.
  5. After submitting the quiz, you can see your score and compare with other users.
  6. The Full Leaderboard link will take you to a page, where you can see all users attempts.
  7. Below the quiz box, there are explanation of each options. You can study and try again.
  8. Best of Luck!
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Quiz Question, Answer and Explanation

Note: Do remember in the quiz box above, the questions and options will shuffle, so they won’t have the same sequence like 1, 2, 3, or A, B, C as below.

1. They __ quarantining affected containers while monitoring propagation for the day.

A) had been quarantining B) quarantined C) have quarantined D) were quarantining

Verb: quarantineverb. To isolate problematic containers/processes; quarantine (noun).

A) Correct: expresses continuous isolation measures that had been in effect leading up to the monitoring checkpoint.

B) Wrong: past simple does not reflect ongoing containment over a period.
C) Wrong: present perfect would imply relevance now rather than prior continuous activity.
D) Wrong: past continuous might indicate in-progress quarantine but not the past-before-past relation.

2. By the time the change log published, we __ annotating every breaking change.

A) had been annotating B) annotated C) have annotated D) were annotating

Verb: annotateverb. To add explanatory notes to documents; annotation (noun).

A) Correct: shows continuous documentation efforts up to the publishing moment; implies methodical work.

B) Wrong: past simple lacks the ongoing annotation process leading to publication.
C) Wrong: present perfect ties the act to the present, not to the prior-to-publish sequence.
D) Wrong: past continuous lacks explicit past-before-past emphasis.

3. They __ evicting expired credentials as rotation progressed over the week.

A) had been evicting B) evicted C) have evicted D) were evicting

Verb: evictverb. To forcibly remove cached items/resources; eviction (noun).

A) Correct: indicates repeated removal of expired credentials across the week ending before a later event.

B) Wrong: past simple fails to show repetition or continuity.
C) Wrong: present perfect ties the action to present relevance rather than past duration.
D) Wrong: past continuous indicates in-progress but not the completion-before relation.

4. Before the release candidate, we __ preloading commonly used resources to reduce latency.

A) had been preloading B) preloaded C) have preloaded D) were preloading

Verb: preloadverb. To load data/resources in advance so they’re available quickly; preloading (noun).

A) Correct: emphasises repeated or continuous prefetch work preceding the RC; shows preparation and duration.

B) Wrong: past simple says preloads happened but not that they were an ongoing preparatory process.
C) Wrong: present perfect connects to present outcome, not the previous sustained activity.
D) Wrong: past continuous lacks the past-before-past placement.

5. They __ hydrating caches from persistent stores during the maintenance window.

A) had been hydrating B) hydrated C) have hydrated D) were hydrating

Verb: hydrateverb. To populate caches with data from persistent storage; hydration (noun).

A) Correct: suggests active population processes that had been running up to the end of the maintenance window.

B) Wrong: past simple would indicate hydration happened but miss the continuous, time-spanning work.
C) Wrong: present perfect emphasizes present state rather than prior continuous processing.
D) Wrong: past continuous shows in-progress action but not the completed-before relation.

6. By the time the rollback executed, we __ partitioning strategy tests for days.

A) had been partitioning B) partitioned C) have partitioned D) were partitioning

Verb: partitionverb. To divide data or workload across segments; partition (noun).

A) Correct: communicates repeated partition trials across days leading up to the rollback decision — duration + prior relation.

B) Wrong: past simple lacks the iterative/duration nuance.
C) Wrong: present perfect ties to present rather than marking prior continuous activity.
D) Wrong: past continuous lacks the “had been … before” structure.

7. They __ queueing background jobs while the primary pipeline degraded.

A) had been queueing B) queued C) have queued D) were queueing

Verb: queueverb. To place work items into a processing queue; queue (noun).

A) Correct: emphasises sustained queuing activity that was happening up to or during degradation, with duration implied.

B) Wrong: past simple reports queuing occurred but does not stress continuation leading up to the critical moment.
C) Wrong: present perfect would be present-focused; not the prior-to relation.
D) Wrong: past continuous could be used but does not convey the finished-before relationship.

8. Before the feature flag turned, they __ parallelizing tasks to improve throughput.

A) had been parallelizing B) parallelized C) have parallelized D) were parallelizing

Verb: parallelizeverb. To enable concurrent execution of tasks; parallelisation (noun).

A) Correct: indicates ongoing engineering work to add concurrency before the flag flip — duration + prior relation stressed.

B) Wrong: past simple describes one-off completion but not iterative engineering efforts.
C) Wrong: present perfect ties to present ramifications not the prior continuous process.
D) Wrong: past continuous suggests progress but not that it had been happening before the flip.

9. They __ pruning old feature branches the entire week before the release.

A) had been pruning B) pruned C) have pruned D) were pruning

Verb: pruneverb. To remove stale branches or code; pruning (noun).

A) Correct: signals continuous housekeeping across the week and places that activity before the release.

B) Wrong: past simple reports pruning happened but not the continuous, repeated nature.
C) Wrong: present perfect ties to present state rather than prior continuous maintenance.
D) Wrong: past continuous doesn’t mark the action as having been ongoing before another past event.

10. By the time we evaluated results, the data team __ enriching records with third-party attributes.

A) had been enriching B) enriched C) have enriched D) were enriching

Verb: enrichverb. To supplement data with extra attributes to improve value; enrichment (noun).

A) Correct: indicates repeated, ongoing augmentation work that concluded prior to evaluation—duration + prior relation.

B) Wrong: past simple indicates enrichment occurred but not the progressive work pattern.
C) Wrong: present perfect suggests present consequences, not the earlier continuous process.
D) Wrong: past continuous lacks the past-before-past nuance.

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