Things
can happen now, in the future or in the past. The tenses show the time of a
verb's action or being. The verb ending is changed (conjugated) to show roughly
what time it is referring to.
Time
can be split into three periods The Present (what
you are doing), The Past (what you
did) and The Future (what you
are going to do).
The
tenses we use to show what time we are talking about are split into the Simple, Continuous and Perfect tenses.
In
English we use two tenses to talk about the present and six tenses to talk
about the past. There are several ways to talk about the future some of which
use the present tenses, these are:
Present
|
Simple Present
|
Present Continuous
|
|
Past
|
Simple Past
|
Past Continuous
|
|
Present Perfect Simple
|
|
Present Perfect Continuous
|
|
Past Perfect Simple
|
|
Past Perfect Continuous
|
|
Future
|
Using the Simple Present
|
Using the Present Continuous
|
|
Using the Present Perfect
Simple
|
|
Using the Present Perfect
Continuous
|
|
Using going to
|
|
Using shall/will
|
The
simple tenses are used to show permanent characteristics of people and events
or what happens regularly, habitually or in a single completed action.
The
continuous tenses are used when talking about a particular point in time.
Sometimes
you need to give just a little bit more information about an action or
state...and that is where the perfect tenses come in.
The
perfect tenses are used when an action or situation in the present is linked to
a moment in the past. It is often used to show things that have happened up to
now but aren't finished yet or to emphasize that something happened but is not
true anymore. When they end determines which of them you use.
Perfect
tenses are never used when we say when something happened i.e. yesterday, last
year etc. but can be used when discussing the duration of something i.e. often,
for, always, since etc..
The Future
Tenses
Discussing
the future in English can seem complicated.The present simple, present continuous, present perfect simple
and the present perfect continuous
can all be used and often it is possible to use more than one structure, but
have the same meaning.
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