Present Perfect English
Present Perfect English
Examples:
We use the Present Perfect to say that an action happened at an unspecified time
before now. The exact time is not important. You CANNOT use the Present Perfect
with specific time expressions such as: yesterday, one year ago, last week, when I
was a child, when I lived in Japan, at that moment, that day, one day, etc. We CAN
use the Present Perfect with unspecific expressions such as: ever, never, once,
many times, several times, before, so far, already, yet, etc.
Examples:
TOPIC 1 Experience
You can use the Present Perfect to describe your experience. It is like saying, "I
have the experience of..." You can also use this tense to say that you have never
had a certain experience. The Present Perfect is NOT used to describe a specific
event.
Examples:
Japanese has become one of the most popular courses at the university
since the Asian studies program was established.
TOPIC 3 Accomplishments
We often use the Present Perfect to list the accomplishments of individuals and
humanity. You cannot mention a specific time.
Examples:
We also use the Present Perfect to talk about several different actions which have
occurred in the past at different times. Present Perfect suggests the process is not
complete and more actions are possible.
Examples:
I have had four quizzes and five tests so far this semester.
She has talked to several specialists about her problem, but nobody
knows why she is sick.
Sometimes, we want to limit the time we are looking in for an experience. We can
do this with expressions such as: in the last week, in the last year, this week, this
month, so far, up to now, etc.
Examples:
She graduated from university less than three years ago. She has
worked for three different companies so far.
NOTICE
"Last year" and "in the last year" are very different in meaning. "Last year" means
the year before now, and it is considered a specific time which requires Simple
Past. "In the last year" means from 365 days ago until now. It is not considered a
specific time, so it requires Present Perfect.
Examples:
With Non-Continuous Verbs and non-continuous uses of Mixed Verbs, we use the
Present Perfect to show that something started in the past and has continued up
until now. "For five minutes," "for two weeks," and "since Tuesday" are all
durations which can be used with the Present Perfect.
Examples:
ADVERB PLACEMENT
The examples below show the placement for grammar adverbs such as: always,
only, never, ever, still, just, etc.
Examples:
ACTIVE / PASSIVE
Examples:
Sentences can be active or passive. Therefore, tenses also have "active forms"
and "passive forms." You must learn to recognize the difference to successfully
speak English.
Active Form
In active sentences, the thing doing the action is the subject of the sentence and
the thing receiving the action is the object. Most sentences are active.
[Thing doing action] + [verb] + [thing receiving action]
Examples:
Passive Form
In passive sentences, the thing receiving the action is the subject of the sentence
and the thing doing the action is optionally included near the end of the sentence.
You can use the passive form if you think that the thing receiving the action is
more important or should be emphasized. You can also use the passive form if you
do not know who is doing the action or if you do not want to mention who is doing
the action.
[Thing receiving action] + [be] + [past participle of verb] + [by] + [thing doing
action]
Examples:
Simple
Present
Active
Passive
Present
Continuous
Simple Past
Past
Continuous
Present
Perfect
Present
Perfect
Continuous
Past Perfect
Past Perfect
Continuous
Simple
Future
WILL
Future
Perfect
WILL
Simple
Future
BE GOING TO
Future
Continuous
WILL
Future
Continuous
BE GOING TO
Future
Perfect
WILL
Future
Perfect
BE GOING TO
Future
Perfect
Continuous
Continuous
BE GOING TO
Used to
Would
Always
Future in
the Past
Future in
the Past
WOULD
WAS GOING TO