I have been waking up for a long time.

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Context:
Amy: Are you just waking up?
Benjamin: No, I have been waking up for a long time.

We do use "waking up" or "woke up" for the answering?
 

tedmc

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The action of waking up i.e. getting up from the bed, is a short one.
It does not make sense the someone takes a long time to do that.

You can say:
I have been up/woken up for a long time.

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JMurray

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not a teacher

Ben's answer is not natural because we don't say "have been waking up" in this situation.
The conversation is more likely to be something like this.

A: Are you just waking up?
or Have you just woken up?
B: No, I've been awake for a long time.

ps: tedmc beat me. I'll leave my post up for the variation.
 

MikeNewYork

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I don't think "I have been woken up for a long time" is natural. "Awake" is better.
 

Raymott

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I read the original differently, though I get it now.
Benjamin: No, I have been waking up for a long time.

For someone like me who takes a while to wake up properly, Benjamin's statement could be used as humour. It's not a serious answer. It means he's been walking around like a zombie for a while. "I'm still waking up" is a very common sentence, even though the person who says it is obviously awake.

I also have to disagree with tedmc that waking up means getting out of bed. It doesn't.

 

tedmc

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I don't think "I have been woken up for a long time" is natural. "Awake" is better.
MikeNY

I have been up/woken up for a long time.
was meant to be

I have been up for a long time.
I have woken up for a long time.

OK, 'wake up' means 'to be roused from sleep', which may not be followed by getting up from the bed immediately.
I am sure it does not take long for the average person to be roused from sleep, to be in a conscious state but still lying in bed.
Those who are in a semi-conscious state walking around like zombies are in a different category.

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Matthew Wai

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May I simply say 'I woke up long ago'?

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MikeNewYork

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I don't think "I have woken up for a long time" is any better.
 

tedmc

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I get what you mean.

I woke up a long time ago. A long time has elapsed since I woke up. The waking up itself didn't take me a long time.
I was confused by the original statements.
 

Matthew Wai

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I have woken up for a long time.
I think it's completely wrong.
Is it because 'wake up' is a momentary verb referring to an action which cannot last for a long time?

I am sure it does not take long for the average person to be roused from sleep, to be in a conscious state but still lying in bed.
I am sure that some people may remain on their beds, using their tablet computers, reading books, talking on the phone, etc.

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tedmc

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Yes.


I think it's completely wrong.

I had corrected the sentence prior to your post.

Another possibility: It took a long time for me to wake up.

The present perfect 'have woken' is tricky. Can someone make a sentence with that?

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Raymott

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"I have woken the children."
"I have woken many times over the last few weeks because of your dog's incessant barking."
 

Matthew Wai

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'Some people do not get out of bed immediately after they have woken.'

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tedmc

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'Some people do not get out of bed immediately after they have woken.'

Not a teacher.

Wouldn't the present tense be better?

Some people do not get out of bed immediately after they wake up.

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