5495 uses. Anjak783. Present Perfect. A ppt presenting Present Perfect tense. It's a grammar guide: there are affirmatives, negatives and questions with some examples and grammar practice. You ca 4743 uses. elagun. The Present Perfect Tense. Present continuous (present progressive) refers to current acts and events, predictions with evidence, or near-future plans. Meanwhile, future simple form relates to future actions and events, uncertain predictions, or spontaneous promises. Example 1: She will turn up on time for tomorrow’s meeting. The past participle is a necessary part of the perfect tenses: the present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect. Although the auxiliary verbs may change, the past participle remains the same in each perfect tense. Present perfect [has / have] + [past participle] They have practiced for this moment their whole life. Past perfect am, is, are + base form + -ing (present participle); for example: writing, talking, smiling : USE : We use the Present Continuous tense to talk about an action happening now (at the moment of speaking). SIGNAL WORDS: look, listen, now, at this moment, at present, etc. Present perfect simple: positive. I've played in a band. She's had dance lessons. They've visited lots of interesting places. We form the present perfect simple with: Subject + have/has + past participle. Positive (+) Subject. have/has. We use the present perfect simple more when there is a result in the present (like the cake) and the present perfect continuous more when the action is important. Umm, OK. So you would say ‘She’s been travelling a lot recently.’. Exactly. Because we’re more interested in the action than the result. .

present perfect continuous tense time signal