Present Perfect Tense - English
Present Perfect Tense
English
DEFINITION OF THE PRESENT PERFECT
TENSE
The present perfect is used to indicate a link between the
present and the past. The time of the action is before now but not
specified, and we are often more interested in the result than
in the action itself.
The formula for this tense is : Subject + Has/Have + Past Participle (Verb3)
BE
CAREFUL! There may be a verb tense in
your language with a similar form, but the meaning is probably NOT the same.
THE PRESENT PERFECT IS USED TO
DESCRIBE
- An action or situation that started in the past and
continues in the present. I have lived in Bristol
since 1984 (= and I still do.)
- An action performed during a period that has not yet
finished. She has been to the cinema twice this
week (= and the week isn't over yet.)
- A repeated action in an unspecified period between the
past and now. We have visited Portugal several
times.
- An action that was completed in the very recent past,
expressed by 'just'. I have just finished my
work.
- An action when the time is not important. He has read 'War and Peace'. (= the result of his reading is important)
Note: When we
want to give or ask details about when, where, who, we use the simple past.
Read more about choosing
between the present perfect and the simple past tenses.
ACTIONS STARTED IN THE PAST AND
CONTINUING IN THE PRESENT
- They haven't lived here for
years.
- She has worked in the bank for
five years.
- We have had the same car for
ten years.
- Have you played the
piano since you were a child?
WHEN THE TIME PERIOD REFERRED TO
HAS NOT FINISHED
- I have worked hard this
week.
- It has rained a lot this
year.
- We haven't seen her today.
ACTIONS REPEATED IN AN UNSPECIFIED
PERIOD BETWEEN THE PAST AND NOW.
- They have seen that film six
times
- It has happened several times
already.
- She has visited them
frequently.
- We have eaten at that
restaurant many times.
ACTIONS COMPLETED IN THE VERY
RECENT PAST (+JUST)
- Have you just finished work?
- I have just eaten.
- We have just seen her.
- Has he just left?
WHEN THE PRECISE TIME OF THE ACTION
IS NOT IMPORTANT OR NOT KNOWN
- Someone has eaten my soup!
- Have you seen 'Gone with the Wind'?
- She's studied Japanese, Russian, and English.
FORMING THE PRESENT PERFECT
The present perfect of any verb is composed of two elements
: the appropriate form of the auxiliary verb to have (present
tense), plus the past participle of the main verb. The past participle of a
regular verb is base+ed, e.g. played, arrived,
looked. For irregular verbs, see the Table of irregular verbs in
the section called 'Verbs'.
Affirmative
|
||
Subject
|
to have
|
past participle
|
She
|
has
|
visited.
|
Negative
|
||
Subject
|
to have + not
|
past participle
|
She
|
has not (hasn't)
|
visited.
|
Interrogative
|
||
to have
|
subject
|
past participle
|
Has
|
she
|
visited?
|
Negative interrogative
|
||
to have +
not
|
subject
|
past participle
|
Hasn't
|
she
|
visited?
|
TO WALK, PRESENT PERFECT
Affirmative
|
Negative
|
Interrogative
|
I have
walked
|
I haven't walked
|
Have I walked?
|
You have
walked
|
You haven't walked.
|
Have you walked?
|
He, she, it has
walked
|
He, she, hasn't walked
|
Has he, she, it walked?
|
We have
walked
|
We haven't walked
|
Have we walked?
|
You have
walked
|
You haven't walked
|
Have you walked?
|
They have
walked
|
They haven't walked
|
Have they walked?
|
Numpang komen :v
BalasHapus