(Please note that British and American English have different rules for the use of this tense. The explanation and exercises here refer to British English. In American English, it is often acceptable to use the past simple in some of these examples.)
We use this tense for unfinished and finished actions:
| Unfinished Actions |
We use this tense when we want to talk about unfinished actions that started in the past and continue to the present. Usually we use it to say 'how long' an action or state has continued with 'since' and 'for'. Often, we use stative verbs in this situation:
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| 'Since' and 'For' |
We use 'since' with a fixed time in the past (2004, April 23rd, last year, two hours ago). The fixed time can be another action, indicated with the past simple (since I was at school, since I arrived):
We use 'for' with a period of time (2 hours, three years, six months):
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| Finished Actions |
| 1: Life experience (we don't say when the experience happened, just sometime in the past)
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2: A finished action with a result in the present (focus on result)
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3: With an unfinished time word (this month, this week, today, in the last year)
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Note: We can't use the present perfect with a finished time word:
I've seen him yesterday.
| 'Been' and 'Gone' |
| In this tense, we use both 'been' and 'gone' as the past participle of 'go', but in slightly different circumstances. |
| Been |
We use 'been' (often when we talk about 'life experience') to mean that the person being talked about has visited the place, and come back. Notice the preposition 'to':
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| Gone |
We use 'gone' (often when we are talking about an action with a result in the present) to mean that the person is at the place now:
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- Which Tense ? exercise 1
- Mix and Match exercise 2
- Can You Remember the Sentences ? exercise 3
- Complete the Sentences exercise 4
- Match the Questions and Answers exercise 5
- Complete the Questions and Answers with the Verbs exercise 6