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  1. Visualise the different English tenses with our interactive timeline! It covers all tenses (past, present, simple) and all aspects (simple, progressive, perfect, perfect progressive) so you can easily learn the difference between the various English verb tenses. Click on a tense or an aspect to get started.

  2. Simple Past Tense Timeline Graphic. ⬤ Past Continuous Tense Timeline Graphic. ⬤ “Be going to” Future Tense Timeline Graphic. ⬤ Present Perfect Tense Timeline Graphic. Similar pages: >> Forms of English tenses with tables. >> Formation of tenses with animated sentences. 5/5 - (4 votes)

  3. The Present Perfect is formed using: – auxiliary verb t o have conjugated in the Present Simple (have / has) – main verb in the Past Participle (ending +ed / +d / irregular) affirmative: subject + auxiliary + main verb. negative: subject + auxiliary + not + main verb. questions: auxiliary + subject + main verb.

  4. Past Simple y Present Perfect son dos tiempos verbales para expresar acciones pasadas, pero se usan en situaciones diferentes y no pueden intercambiarse. Lingolia te presenta una explicación comparada para que aprendas a diferenciarlos fácilmente.

  5. Present perfect. Level: beginner. The present perfect is formed from the present tense of the verb have and the past participle of a verb. We use the present perfect: for something that started in the past and continues in the present: They've been married for nearly fifty years. She has lived in Liverpool all her life.

  6. Present perfect simple and past simple. I've travelled around the world. I travelled around Asia five years ago. He hasn't met our cousins. He didn't meet our cousins in 2014. Have you talked to my sister yet? Yes, I have. I talked to her yesterday. For more information on forms of the present perfect (simple), see Present perfect simple: positive.

  7. learnenglish.britishcouncil.org › grammar › b1-b2-grammarPresent perfect | LearnEnglish

    Grammar explanation. We use the present perfect simple ( have or has + past participle) to talk about past actions or states which are still connected to the present. Unfinished time and states.