Present Continuous
Present Simple
Present Perfect Continuous
Present Perfect
Past Simple
Past Perfect
Past Perfect Continuous
Future Simple
Future Continuous
Future Perfect
Future Perfect Continuous
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Past PerfectIf you're here for the first time, you may want to see the list of things that will make browsing this website more beneficial.
The Past Perfect is quite simple and useful, we use it to show that one action in the past occurred before another action in the past. Use
The Past Perfect is also used in a number of expressions like these:
I wish, as if/though and if only I wish I hadn't gone there. John looked as if he had done something terrible. Form
Positive sentences:
TYPICAL MISTAKES: As soon as the film started, I realized I had
Use 3 is the so-called hypothetical past. We're talking about things that never happened. I wish I had fixed my umberella. (but I didn't) If only I had known the answer to that question. (but I didn't)
You may find that people (especially native speakers) don't use the Past Perfect.
This is because "after" or "before" tell the listener which action happened first.
Questions (interrogative sentences):
Common time expressions (time adverbials) in the Past Perfect:
after, before, already, as soon as, just, yet, until, till, by the time that.
Negative sentences:
Past Perfect is used in reported speech (=saying someone else said):
OR
So, the Past Simple and the Present Perfect are replaced with the Past Perfect. Check your understandingDid not find what you were looking for? Try searching Google |
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