Tense

Tense

What is Tense?

Simply put, tenses are grammatical forms of verbs used to indicate the time of an actionevent or state of something or someone in a sentence.

In English, there are three primary tenses: the past tense, the present tense, and the future tense. Each of these tenses can be further divided into four aspects: simplecontinuous (or progressive), perfect, and perfect continuous.


Tense Structure

  V1 V2 V3 V4 V5
  Base/Present Past Past Participle Present Participle Present Singular
REGULAR walk walked walked walking walks
IRREGULAR go went gone going goes


Present

  Simple Continuous Perfect Perfect Continuous
  V1/V5 am/is/are + V4 have/has + V3 has/have been + V4
REGULAR talk/s talking have/has talked have/has been talking
IRREGULAR eat/s eating have/has eaten have/has been eating

Simple Present: Used to describe actions or events that are happening now, habitual actions, general truths, and scheduled events in the future.
Example: “I write a letter.” (happening now) / “She plays the piano.” (habitual action) / “The sun rises in the east.” (general truth) / “The train departs tomorrow.” (scheduled future event)

Present Continuous/Progressive: Used to describe actions that are currently in progress at the time of speaking or to describe future plans or arrangements.
Example: “I am writing a letter.” (currently in progress) / “He is meeting his friends tomorrow.” (future arrangement)

Present Perfect: Used to describe actions that started in the past and have a connection to the present.
Example: “I have seen that movie before.”

Present Perfect Continuous/Progressive: Used to describe actions that started in the past, are still continuing, and have a connection to the present.
Example: “She has been studying for her exams.”

Past

  Simple Continuous Perfect Perfect Continuous
  V2 “to be” (was/were) + V4 had + V3 had been + V4
REGULAR talked was/were talking had talked had been talking
IRREGULAR ate was/were eating had eaten had been eating

Simple Past: Used to describe actions or events that have already happened in the past.
Example: “She wrote a letter yesterday.”

Past Continuous/Progressive: Used to describe actions that were ongoing at a specific point in the past.
Example: “They were watching a movie when I arrived.”

Past Perfect: Used to describe actions that were completed before a specific point in the past.
Example: “He had already left when I arrived.”

Past Perfect Continuous/Progressive: Used to describe actions that were ongoing for a period before a specific point in the past.
Example: “They had been waiting for hours before the concert started.”

Future

  Simple Continuous Perfect Perfect Continuous
  will + V1 will be + V4 will + have + V3 will + have been + V4
REGULAR will + talk will be talking will have talked will have been talking
IRREGULAR will + eat will be eating will have eaten will have been eating

Simple Future: Used to describe actions that will happen in the future.
Example: “They will visit their grandparents next week.”

Future Continuous/Progressive: Used to describe actions that will be in progress at a specific time in the future.
Example: “I will be studying at 9 PM tomorrow.”

Future Perfect: Used to describe actions that will be completed before a specific time in the future.
Example: “By next month, I will have finished my project.”

Future Perfect Continuous/Progressive: Used to describe actions that will have been ongoing and completed before a specific time in the future.
Example: “He will have been working for ten years by the end of this month.”

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Conditionals

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