Past tenses in English
The different ways of expressing past time in English.
Index : | The simple past | The present perfect | The
past perfect |
The
future perfect |
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English uses three principal forms of the past, the Simple Past (or preterite), the Present Perfect (or compound past), and the Past perfect, sometimes called the Pluperfect. There is also a special tense called the future perfect.
The three past tenses of English all have simple and progressive forms, as illustrated below. These tenses can be used in the active, as in the examples on this page, or the passive.
Forms of past tenses : sample verb make
I | you | he she it one | we | you | they | |
Simple past | made | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present perfect | have made | has made | have made | |||
Past perfect | had made | |||||
Future perfect | will have made |
I | you | he she it one | we | you | they | |
Simple past | was making | were making | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present perfect | have been making | has been making | have been making | |||
Past perfect | had been making | |||||
Future perfect | will have been making |
Look at English grammar with Linguapress. Simple rules, clear examples.
1. The simple past.
This is used to relate past events in a historic context. Often, you will know that it must be used, because the sentence also contains an adverb (or adverb phrase) of time, such as yesterday, a date or time as in example 1, or an implied but unstated moment, as in example 3.1) Queen Victoria died in 1901.
2) The Titanic sank when it hit an iceberg.
3) I told you not to drink too much
4) Next, they went and cooked dinner.
1.1. Simple past - progressive or continuous forms:
Here are
some
examples with a progressive or continuous form
too: both of the events in each sentence are "historic", but one took
place
while another longer-lasting situation
was true:
5) John Lennon died while he was living in New York.
6) The students shouted as the President was speaking.
1.2. Used to and would - the past of finished situation or finished habit
To express a finished habit, or terminated situation or action, there are two additional possible structures, one with used to, the other with would. To express a terminated situation, only the structure with used to can be used. Terminated situation can also be expressed using the simple past often reinforced by an adverb of duration or of time.1) I used to go to Brighton when I was a child. But I don't any longer.
2) He would call her every day when she was younger, but he doesn't now
3) This street used to be very quiet; but nowadays it's full of traffic.
4) This street was once very quiet, but nowadays it's full of traffic.
2. The Present Perfect (or compound past)
In
British
English, the present
perfect (which Samuel Johnson called, perhaps more
appropriately, the compound
preterite) is used to situate past
events, or the consequences of past events, in relation to
the present
situation (that's why it is called the "present"
perfect).
Americans do not always use the present perfect in this situation.
1. I have ordered a new refrigerator, darling!
(i.e., the speaker means "A new refrigerator is coming and will be here soon").
2. I've eaten too much!
(i.e. the speaker implies: "At this moment now, I do not feel very well; I have a funny feeling in my stomach!)
3. Manchester United have won the Cup
(i.e. Manchester United are now, at this moment , football champions).
You do not usually find adverbs of time used with verbs in the present perfect, but there are some exceptions:
2. adverbs of frequency:
3. adverbs or adverb phrases of duration related to the present:
2. I've often seen people driving too fast down that road.
3. I've lived in London for ten years.
(Contrast with: I lived in London for ten years (but I don't live there now) - a historic statement)
4. I've lived in London since 1985.
5. I've been living in London since 1985. (Both of these forms are acceptable)
6. Up to now, I've always refused to eat fish.
2.1. Present-perfect progressive or present-perfect continuous:
These
progressive forms are used when we want to imply that an event / events
in the past have been continuing until the present point in time, or
have taken place over a period of time in the past
The doctor has been seeing patients for most of the afternoon.
3. The past perfect or pluperfect.
The past perfect tense, or pluperfect, as in He had seen, is normally only used in English when one past event (either a specific action, or a contuous condition) has to be situated in a more distant past than another past event. In some situations, the progressive or continuous form is necessary.I had just put the phone down, when the doorbell rang.
The man had been drinking before the accident happened.
He had worked in the company for five years before he got promotion.
4. The future perfect
The future perfect, as in They will have finished , is used to situate a moment or situation thatwill be in the past by the time (a) another event occurs, or (b) a point in time is reached, or (c) another situation is true.a) I will have finished reading the book before I go to bed.
b1) I think that the boss will have interviewed all the new candidates by 6 p.m.
b2) By next Monday, I will have been living here for a month.
c) If you get all the answers right, you will have done better than anyone else.
Comparative grammar: Using past tenses in French:
Footnote.
For an overview of this linguistic argument, see The Present perfect : present tense or past tense ?