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1). How long is it since you were in London?

2). How long has it been since you were in London?

What is the difference in meaning between these two sentences?

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  • They look equivalent to me. The second is perhaps slightly more informal.
    – Peter
    Commented Jul 3, 2020 at 10:54
  • 1
    Does this answer your question? "It's done." or "It's been done." (the answer in this question could be either Simple Present It is a year or Present Perfect It has been a year; both mean exactly the same thing). Commented Jul 3, 2020 at 12:06
  • "How long is it?" "That's a rather personal question"
    – James K
    Commented Nov 19, 2022 at 23:10

3 Answers 3

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1). How long is it since you were in London?

2). How long has it been since you were in London?

Both sentences have the same meaning. Also, both sentences are grammatically correct.

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  • Hello sir, as per my learning since means started in the past and still to present , why since can be used with present simple and it should be used with perfect tenses.It should be "how long is it from when you were in London" and "how long has it been since you were in london".I am confused,sir.@Samuel Muldoon
    – Thamilay
    Commented Apr 7 at 2:29
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Both are correct. They mean the same.

We usually say 'How long is it since...'

  • 'How long is it since you were in London?' (=When were you in London?)

  • 'It is four years since I was in London.'

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The correct question format (in American English) is: "How long ago were you in London?" or: "How long has it been since you were in London?"

The correct answer format (in American English) is: "I was in London five years ago." or: "I haven't been in London since 2019."

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    Commented Apr 5 at 4:20

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