Past Perfect Continuous Tense Quiz, Test, Exercise

Past Perfect Continuous Tense — Exercise 9 (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 __ encrypting configuration blobs as rotation progressed over the week.

A) had been encrypting B) encrypted C) have encrypted D) were encrypting

Verb: encryptverb. To encode data to prevent unauthorised access; encryption (noun).

A) Correct: explicitly captures repeated encryption activity across the week and positions it before rotation completion.

B) Wrong: past simple fails to communicate repetition/duration up to rotation.
C) Wrong: present perfect indicates present relevance, not prior continuous steps.
D) Wrong: past continuous suggests in-progress action but not that it had been happening before the later event.

2. Before the opt-in deadline, they __ pinging users with reminder emails every day.

A) had been pinging B) pinged C) have pinged D) were pinging

Verb: pingverb. To send short notifications/requests to users; ping (noun).

A) Correct: conveys daily, repeated outreach up to the deadline — sustained behavior placed before that deadline.

B) Wrong: past simple could mean one or several pings but doesn’t emphasise habitual/daily pattern.
C) Wrong: present perfect would suggest current relevance rather than the historical continuity.
D) Wrong: past continuous lacks clear past-before-past placement.

3. They __ rehydrating test datasets during the dry-run window.

A) had been rehydrating B) rehydrated C) have rehydrated D) were rehydrating

Verb: rehydrateverb. To restore data from compressed/archived form into usable state; rehydration (noun).

A) Correct: signals ongoing dataset restoration activity that had been happening before the dry run concluded.

B) Wrong: past simple would only narrate the act without continuous/time-span emphasis.
C) Wrong: present perfect links to now, not the earlier continuous task.
D) Wrong: past continuous suggests activity occurred but not that it had been happening prior to a later point.

4. By the time the incident reconciled, they __ reclaiming orphaned volumes automatically.

A) had been reclaiming B) reclaimed C) have reclaimed D) were reclaiming

Verb: reclaimverb. To recover unused resources (volumes, space); reclamation (noun).

A) Correct: emphasises continuous resource recovery activity that took place until reconciliation; conveys repeated attempts.

B) Wrong: past simple lacks the repeated/time-spanning nuance.
C) Wrong: present perfect indicates present outcome, not prior continuous work.
D) Wrong: past continuous indicates in-progress action but doesn’t show it had been going on before reconciliation.

5. They __ checkpointing container states while testing failover scenarios.

A) had been checkpointing B) checkpointed C) have checkpointed D) were checkpointing

Verb: checkpointverb. To create a snapshot or savepoint enabling recovery; checkpoint (noun).

A) Correct: shows continuous snapshotting during tests and places it before any later event like cutover; implies repeated saves.

B) Wrong: past simple would not stress repeated snapshots or their duration.
C) Wrong: present perfect ties to current status instead of prior continuous testing.
D) Wrong: past continuous lacks explicit placement before another past action.

6. Before the migration, they __ sanitising PII fields across datasets.

A) had been sanitising B) sanitised C) have sanitised D) were sanitising

Verb: sanitiseverb. To remove or mask personally identifiable information; sanitization (noun).

A) Correct: indicates ongoing sanitisation across datasets that concluded before migration — conveys compliance efforts and duration.

B) Wrong: past simple merely records the act, not repeated thorough work.
C) Wrong: present perfect suggests present connection, not past sequence.
D) Wrong: past continuous might indicate but not emphasise prior completion.

7. They __ throttling connections gradually as load spiked over the evening.

A) had been throttling B) throttled C) have throttled D) were throttling

Verb: throttleverb. To limit rate of requests or resource usage; throttling (noun).

A) Correct: shows continuous, adaptive limiting that had been in effect leading up to a later measurement or event.

B) Wrong: past simple states throttling happened but not the adaptive, continuous nuance.
C) Wrong: present perfect links to present rather than prior duration.
D) Wrong: past continuous indicates in-progress action but not the past-before-past relation.

8. By the time the dashboard updated, the analytics team __ quantifying outliers across feeds.

A) had been quantifying B) quantified C) have quantified D) were quantifying

Verb: quantifyverb. To measure or express something as a number; quantification (noun).

A) Correct: denotes ongoing measurements across feeds that occurred up to the dashboard update; emphasizes process and duration.

B) Wrong: past simple tells that quantification occurred but not that it was sustained prior to the update.
C) Wrong: present perfect points to present relevance, not the prior long activity.
D) Wrong: past continuous lacks the completed-before relation.

9. They __ purging old logs while the retention policy staged over the weekend.

A) had been purging B) purged C) have purged D) were purging

Verb: purgeverb. To remove unwanted or outdated items; purge (noun).

A) Correct: shows continuing deletion activity aligned with policy staging; indicates repeated action that was done prior to Monday.

B) Wrong: past simple would not show the sustained weekend effort.
C) Wrong: present perfect situates results in present, not the prior continuous work.
D) Wrong: past continuous may indicate activity but not that it had been occurring before a subsequent past event.

10. Before the rollout, SREs __ stress-testing the cluster with synthetic load.

A) had been stress-testing B) stress-tested C) have stress-tested D) were stress-testing

Verb: stress-testverb. To apply heavy load to systems to evaluate behaviour; stress test (noun).

A) Correct: indicates ongoing load testing that had been performed leading into the rollout — implies duration and iterative adjustments.

B) Wrong: past simple states tests ran, but not that they were a prolonged process ending before rollout.
C) Wrong: present perfect connects tests to the present result, rather than being placed before rollout.
D) Wrong: past continuous denotes in-progress action but doesn’t mark it as happening before the rollout.

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