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An overview of verb tenses, explaining the concepts of past, present, and future tenses, as well as perfect and progressive tenses. It covers the simple forms of each tense and discusses how to form the perfect and progressive tenses. Examples are given to illustrate the usage of each tense.
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Every verb describes an action or state of being that has a place in time. The action or state of being may be immediate, in the here and now. It may have happened some time ago. Or, it may not have happened yet. We call a verb’s placement in time its “tense,” and talk of its being in the past , present , or future tense.
In the not too distant past, you looked at a sentence that starts several lines above this one. The verb looked is in the past tense. The past tense includes any action or state of being that we could find between the dawn of time and a split second before the present.
In the present tense, you are reading this very sentence. The verb phrase are reading is in the present tense. The present tense includes only those actions or states of being that exist in the immediate moment. Perhaps you are considering a trip to the kitchen, thinking, “I am hungry.” The verb am is in the present tense.
In the near future, you will finish reading this page. The verb phrase will finish is in the future tense. The future tense encompasses all actions or states of being we might encounter from one moment after the present until end of time.
A verb in the future tense is always in the form of a verb phrase, i.e., it is always two or more words. The English language does not have any one-word forms for verbs in the future tense. Instead, we combine one of the auxiliary verbs shall or will with a principal or main verb to form a verb phrase for the future tense.
Examples: This caterpillar will become a Monarch butterfly.
I shall return.
In the discussion of tenses above, we talked about three tenses in their most basic forms, the simple forms. In their simple forms, the three tenses involve actions that merely occur at their respective places in time. Unless otherwise specified, we assume a tense to be simple. When we refer to the present tense , we are referring to the simple present. When we refer to the past tense , we are referring to the simple past. And when we refer to the future tense , we are referring to the simple future.
Perfect Tenses Sometimes, however, it becomes necessary to use the verb to indicate action that ends. Here, we need to use the perfect tenses. The perfect forms of the past, present, and future tenses have fixed ending points in time.
In the perfect form of the past tense, called the past perfect tense , the verb expresses an action or condition that was completed before a certain time in the past. To form the past perfect tense of a verb, use had with the past participle of the main verb ( had + verb + - ed ).
Example: I had smoked my last cigarette before smoking was banned in public buildings.
Here, the behavior was ended at a point in the past. The verb phrase had smoked is in the past perfect tense.
The present tense in its perfect form, called the present perfect tense , expresses an action or condition that is completed in the present. To form the present perfect tense of a verb, use have or has with the past participle of the main verb ( have or has + verb + - ed ).
Example: I have smoked my last cigarette.
The behavior is abandoned now, in the present. The verb phrase have smoked is in the present perfect tense.
In the perfect form of the future tense, called the future perfect tense , the verb describes action that will be completed before a certain time in the future. To form the future perfect tense of a verb, use either shall or will and have with the past participle of the main verb ( shall or will + have + verb + - ed ).
Example: I will have smoked my last cigarette before I leave on vacation with Ingrid.
The behavior will be given up in the future at some point before the speaker leaves for his or her vacation. The verb phrase will have smoked is in the future perfect tense.
Progressive Tenses
There is yet another verb tense that includes verbs whose action or condition is specifically ongoing , the progressive tense. The action or condition of verbs in a progressive tense begins at some point in time– past, present, or future–and continues. A progressive tense verb adds a form of the verb be to its present participle ( be + verb + - ing ). Like the future perfect, the future progressive also uses shall or will with other pieces of the progressive tense verb.
Past progressive: I was thinking of you while playing our John Legend albums the other day.
Present progressive: I am thinking of you.
Future progressive: I will be thinking of you when I’m in San Francisco next month.
Perfect Progressive Tenses
Oddly enough, a tense can be both progressive and perfect. It may seem counterintuitive that a verb can involve an ongoing action or condition that has a fixed ending point, but a moment’s consideration will reveal this to be true. That some event or feeling is ongoing does not mean that it will never end or has not ended. It simply means that the action or condition persisted for a notable period of time before it ended.
Past perfect progressive: I had been thinking of you until Ray demanded my attention.
Present perfect progressive: I have been thinking of you and wondering whether you’re OK.
Future perfect progressive: I will have been thinking of you when the final waltz draws to a close.
The thinking in each example began, continued for a time, and then ended. Each verb is in its respective perfect progressive tense.