fakhrulhidayat33's avatar
fakhrulhidayat33

April 24, 2025

5
B.J. Habibie

B.J. Habibie had been striving since he was young to become an engineer. He studied abroad and never gave up. In the end, he successfully made the first airplane made in Indonesia.


B.J. Habibie bekerja keras sejak muda untuk menjadi insinyur. Dia belajar di luar negeri dan tidak pernah menyerah. Akhirnya, dia berhasil membuat pesawat pertama buatan Indonesia.

Corrections

Habibie hads been striving since he was young to become an engineer.

As mentioned by Caaynier, "had" should be "has":

The Present Perfect Continuous Tense is a tense used to describe an activity that started in the past and has persisted or continued until the current instant.

https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/present-perfect-continuous-tense

In the end, he successfully made the first airplane made in Indonesiabuilt Indonesia's first airplane.

Your sentence has unnecessary repetition and unclear phrasing ("made" is repeated twice). It is also not clear whether the airplane was the first built in Indonesia or just the first of its kind.

There are slight variations in the spelling of some words between American and British English, and "airplane" is one example that you should be aware of. In American English, the official spelling is "airplane". In British English, the official spelling is "aeroplane". Both are valid and refer to the same thing – a "pesawat terbang".

Feedback

Kerja bagus. Terus berlatih.

Good work. Keep practising.

fakhrulhidayat33's avatar
fakhrulhidayat33

April 25, 2025

5

But he checked out of his life on September 11, 2019.....

fusednix's avatar
fusednix

April 28, 2025

0

If by "checked out of his life" you mean that the person died in September 2019, then your original sentence is indeed correct:

"Habibie had been striving since he was young to become an engineer."

However, your second sentence is still incorrect, per the above correction.

B.J. Habibie

B.J.

Habibie hads been striving since he was young to become an engineer.

"has/have been (verb)-ing"

Present perfect continuous tense
[ something done in the past, person is doing until present ]

He studied abroad and never gave up.

In the end, he successfully made the first airplane made in Indonesia.

Craynier's avatar
Craynier

April 24, 2025

4

Also put "hard"

striving "hard"

B.J. Habibie


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

B.J.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

Habibie had been striving since he was young to become an engineer.


Habibie hads been striving since he was young to become an engineer.

"has/have been (verb)-ing" Present perfect continuous tense [ something done in the past, person is doing until present ]

Habibie hads been striving since he was young to become an engineer.

As mentioned by Caaynier, "had" should be "has": The Present Perfect Continuous Tense is a tense used to describe an activity that started in the past and has persisted or continued until the current instant. https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/present-perfect-continuous-tense

He studied abroad and never gave up.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

In the end, he successfully made the first airplane made in Indonesia.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

In the end, he successfully made the first airplane made in Indonesiabuilt Indonesia's first airplane.

Your sentence has unnecessary repetition and unclear phrasing ("made" is repeated twice). It is also not clear whether the airplane was the first built in Indonesia or just the first of its kind. There are slight variations in the spelling of some words between American and British English, and "airplane" is one example that you should be aware of. In American English, the official spelling is "airplane". In British English, the official spelling is "aeroplane". Both are valid and refer to the same thing – a "pesawat terbang".

You need LangCorrect Premium to access this feature.

Go Premium