Tense and Time
Tense and Time
Tense and Time
I read nearly every I read a poem yesterday. I will read twenty books this
day. year.
Present Continuous Past Continuous Future Continuous
I am reading I was reading Plato yesterday. I will be reading
Shakespeare at the Murakami soon.
moment.
Continuous
I have been reading I had been reading for at I will have been reading for at
since 10 am. least 10 hours at a stretch least one more hour.
PRESENT TENSE
1. Simple Present
The simple present tense is used to describe an ongoing or a habitual action. For example,
The Sun rises in the east. We travel every summer. Most regular verbs are used in the root
form in Simple Present, except in the third person, the suffix ‘-s’ or ‘-es’ is attached with the
root form of the verb. For example, He/she/it writes
The present continuous tense indicates an action or condition in progress and may continue
into the future. For example,
Mother is cooking now.
They are going to the market latter today.
Common Action Verbs that use the Present Continuous: Ask, call, eat, help, hit, jump, look
at, play, throw, change, grow, arrive, fall, feel, hurt, ache
Common Stative Verbs that do not use the Present Continuous: Recognise, deserve,
understand, own, belong, need, possess, feel, hate, love, sound
The present perfect tense refers to an action or state that either occurred at some time in
the past or began in the past and has continued to the present time . For example,
I have come here before.
We have bought the Rasogolla from this shop.
She has had fever since Tuesday.
The present perfect continuous tense talks about an action that in the past and is continuing
at the present time. For example,
Mita has been competing in painting competitions these days.
Harish hasn’t been feeling well lately.
PAST TENSE
For regular verbs, Simple Past is formulated by addin ‘-d’ or ‘-ed’ to the root form of the verb.
Play→Played Type→Typed Listen→Listened
The simple past tense of some irregular verbs looks exactly like the root form:
Put→Put Cut→Cut Set→Set Cost→Cost
For other irregular verbs, including the verb to be, the simple past forms are more erratic:
See→Saw Build→Built Go→Went Am/Is/Are→Was/Were
2. Past Continuous Tense
The past continuous tense refers to an action or state that was continuing at some point in the
past. For example, We were playing in the sun every day that summer.
I was making dinner when she arrived.
Certain verbs can’t be used in the past continuous tense. One common example is the verb
to arrive. For example,
Incorrect: At noon, he was arriving. Correct: At noon, he arrived.
When, for, since, before are the words that used in a sentence in Past Perfect Continuous
Tense. For example, The manager had been working in this company since 1980.
FUTURE TIME
1. Simple Future
Simple future anticipates an action or condition that will begin and end in the future. For
example, I will go on a vacation this summer.
2. Future Continuous
The future continuous anticipates an action that will occur in the future and continue for a
certain amount of time. For example, I will be arriving at five o’clock.
It is important to note that the future continuous tense is only used with action verbs,
because it is possible to do them for a duration.
Present Tense
Past Tense
I had been reading. I had not been reading. Had you been reading?
He/She had been reading. He/She had not been Had she been reading?
reading
Future Time
I will have read. I will not have read. Will I have read?
He/She will have read. He/She will not have Will he/she have read?
read
Future Subject+Auxiliary (will) Subject+Auxiliary Auxiliary (will)
Perfect + has/have+been (will)+not+ has/have+ +subject+been
continuous +Verb(root+ing) been+Verb(root+in) +Verb(root+ing)
I will have been reading. I will not have been Will you have been
reading. reading?
He/She has been reading He/She will not have
been reading. Will she have been
reading?