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2.7: Verb Tenses

  • Page ID
    53686
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    Choosing Appropriate Verb Tenses

    Learning Objectives

    • Understand the simple verb tenses: past, present, and future
    • Recognize the progressive, perfect, and perfect progressive verb tenses
    • Correctly use the different verb tenses

    The tense of a verb usually gives readers a sense of time. In other words, verb tense explains if the action in the sentence took place previously (past tense), is taking place right now (present tense), or will take place some time in the future (future tense). Tense also can indicate continual or recurring action (progressive), action that has completely taken place as of a certain time (perfect), and action that began in the past but continues or recurs through the present time (perfect progressive).

    When writing an academic essay with sources, you may have noticed that simple present tense is the standard for reporting verbs. This is also a convention of MLA style, so you should avoid shifting from present to past tense, especially with reporting verbs.

    EXERCISE 1

    The quote below is from The Best We Could Do, a graphic novel by Thi Bui. Read the two examples and decide which one is correct. Give a reason for your choice.

    • Thi Bui wrote, “Family is something I have created — and not just something I was born into”(21).
    • Thi Bui writes, “Family is something I have created — and not just something I was born into” (21).

    Verbs also have different forms for the different pronouns and numbers. In other words, first person (I, we) might require a different verb form from second person (singular you, plural you) and third person (he, she, it, they), and whether the pronoun is singular (I, you, he, she, it) or plural (we, you, they) can also make a difference in the verb form used.

    Verb Tenses for the Regular Verb “Look” and the Irregular Verb “Eat”

  • Progressive
  • Perfect
  • Perfect progressive
  • >Future: will have been
  • Tense Number and Person Past Present Future

    Simple

    First-person singular I had been looking. I have been looking. I will have been looking.
    I had been eating. I have been eating. I will have been eating.
    First-person plural We had been looking. We have been looking. We will have been looking.
    We had been eating. We have been eating. We will have been eating.
    Second-person singular You had been looking. You have been looking. You will have been looking.
    You had been eating. You have been eating. You will have been eating.
    Second-person plural You had been looking. You have been looking. You will have been looking.
    You had been eating. You have been eating. You will have been eating.
    Third-person singular He had been looking. He has been looking. He will have been looking.
    She had been eating. She has been eating. She will have been eating.
    Third-person plural They had been looking. They have been looking. They will have been looking.
    They had been eating. They have been eating. They will have been eating.

    Key Takeaways

    • The simple verb tenses are past, present, and future.
    • Progressive tenses use a form of the verb “to be” along with the –ing form of the verb to indicate continual or recurring action.
    • Perfect tenses use a form of the verb “to be” along with the past participle form of the verb to indicate action that took place before a certain time.
    • Perfect progressive tenses use a form of the verb “to be” along with the –ing form of the verb to indicate action that began in the past and continues or recurs through the present time.

    EXERCISE 2

    • Identify the verb tense used in each of the following sentences:
      1. I have heard that saying before.
      2. Joey seemed uncomfortable when he was at my house yesterday.
      3. You will be running in the second heat this afternoon.
      4. Lois is writing a letter to the editor.
      5. By ten o’clock tonight, we will have been walking for twenty hours.
    • Write three sentences using simple tense, three using progressive tense, three using perfect tense, and three using perfect progressive tense. Make sure to include each of the following variations at least once: past, present, future, first person, second person, third person, singular, and plural.

    This page titled 2.7: Verb Tenses is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Edgar Perez, Jenell Rae, Jacob Skelton, Lisa Horvath, & Sara Behseta (ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative) .

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