Is the second sentence the past version of the first?

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Tan Elaine

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When I return home, she has been waiting for me since two hours ago.

When I returned home, she had been waiting for me since two hours before.

Is the second sentence the past version of the first? If not, how should I phrase the sentence?

Thanks.
 
When I got home, she'd (she had) been waiting for me for two hours.
 
Thanks to both of you.

Should I use "for" in the first sentence?

When I got home, she has been waiting for me for two hours.
 
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'Waiting' happened before 'got home', so the past perfect should be used instead of the present perfect.

Not a teacher.
 
Sorry. There was a typo.

I meant the first sentence, so it should be "When I return home, she has been waiting for me for two hours." Would this be preferred to the original sentence?

Thanks.
 
Are you talking about a habitual action? If not, then you sound like you are trying to use the literary trick of speaking in the present tense to tell a story.
 
Thanks, emsr.

It is a one-off situation.
 
Then I would use the past tense.

By the way, if you are going to use someone's username on the forum, please use the whole name. My username is "emsr2d2" for a reason. Abbreviating it to "emsr" doesn't make any sense. In case my avatar doesn't give it away, the most relevant part of it is "r2d2"!
 
My apologies for not typing your username in full. I will do so in future.
 
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Then I would use the past tense.

By the way, if you are going to use someone's username on the forum, please use the whole name. My username is "emsr2d2" for a reason. Abbreviating it to "emsr" doesn't make any sense. In case my avatar doesn't give it away, the most relevant part of it is "r2d2"!

Just curious, is r2d2 Artoo-Detoo?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R2-D2
 
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