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1.4: The Simple Present Tense

  • Page ID
    354088
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    Present Perfect Form Reference Table

    What is the Present Perfect?

    The present perfect connects the past with the present. It describes actions that happened at an unspecified time in the past or actions that began in the past and continue to the present.

    Formation: Subject + have/has + past participle

    Form Structure Example Usage & Meaning
    AFFIRMATIVE STATEMENTS
    I/You/We/They + have Subject + have + past participle Mei-Hui has visited Tokyo three times.
    Aleksandr and Lina have lived here for five years.
    Used with plural subjects and I/you
    He/She/It + has Subject + has + past participle Jamileh has studied French since childhood.
    Shoko has just finished her homework.
    Used with singular third-person subjects
    NEGATIVE STATEMENTS
    haven't / hasn't Subject + have/has + not + past participle Qian hasn't traveled abroad yet.
    We haven't seen Mahdieh recently.
    Expresses that something has not happened up to now
    YES/NO QUESTIONS
    Have/Has + Subject Have/Has + subject + past participle? Has Elvira ever been to Brazil?
    Have you finished your project?
    Questions about experiences or completed actions
    WH- QUESTIONS
    WH- + have/has WH-word + have/has + subject + past participle? Where has Liheng traveled this year?
    How long have Sadaf and Fang known each other?
    Questions asking for specific information

    Common Uses of Present Perfect

    Life Experiences

    Use present perfect to describe experiences without specifying when they happened. Examples: Janelle has climbed Mount Fuji. Li has never eaten sushi.

    Unfinished Time Periods

    Use present perfect for actions in time periods that aren't finished yet (today, this week, this year). Examples: Svetlana has written two emails today. We have studied three chapters this week.

    Recent Actions

    Use present perfect with "just" for actions that happened very recently. Examples: Yuki has just arrived from Osaka. Carlos has just called from São Paulo.

    Duration (For/Since)

    Use present perfect for actions that started in the past and continue now. Use "for" with periods of time and "since" with specific starting points. Examples: Dmitri has worked here since 2020. Fatima has known English for ten years.


    This page titled 1.4: The Simple Present Tense is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Don Bissonnette.

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