Hi there! — Present Perfect . , Present Perfect, .
:
, ( , ).
Present Perfect — . (I have found it. – .)
Present Perfect, have/has , ( «-ed» ). .
I have finished my project. – .
I haven’t finished my project. – .
Have you finished your project? – ?
Present Perfect, , . ?
I have learnt English since childhood. – ( ).
I have broken my leg and I am at hospital now. – .
I have made all the tasks this week. – ( ).
Present Perfect .
. Present Perfect , .
Present Perfect , . , «» (already) – ? ? ?
, Present Perfect:
ever – -, , -;
never – ;
just – , , , , , , -, , ;
already – , , ;
not … yet – , , , , ;
before – , , , , ;
lately – , , , ;
of late – , , ;
so far – , , , , , ;
recently – , , , , ;
by now – ;
up to now – , ;
since – ( - );
still – .
Present Perfect .
I have already bought a gift. – .
He has just started this task. – .
, «already» , .
You have come already! – !
I have never seen him. – ( , — « + », « »).
He has lately read many books. – .
She has made good progress recently. – .
They have not spoken of late. – .
I have already been here. – .
I have seen this film before. – .
They haven’t finished their project yet. – .
I haven’t had lunch yet. – .
Have you ever been to New York? – - -?
Have you cooked dinner yet? – ?
«yet» , -, . «not yet» — « »:
- Have you congratulated Bill? - Not yet. I'll call him right now. – ? - . .
She has read all his books by now. – .
He has so far written ten letters to her. – .
Up to now I haven’t found my keys. – .
I still haven't finished writing my composition. – .
He still hasn't found a new job! – !
«just», «already», «yet» Present Perfect, Past Simple. , :
The mail justcame. – ( ).
The mail has justcome ( ).
I alreadyheard the news. – (.).
I’ve alreadyheard the news (.).
«just now» Past Simple.
She was here justnow. – .
recently 2 : « » « ».
« » Past Simple.
I started playing the piano only recently. – .
« » Present Perfect.
I haven’theard from her recently. – .
Present Simple
And that’s all for today! PresentPerfect, . , .
May your English be perfect! And don't forget, there's always a better You living inside! You are highly welcome #DailyEnglish.
Englishdom
The present perfect is used to indicate a link between the present and the past. The time of the action is before now but not specified, and we are often more interested in the result than in the action itself.
BE CAREFUL! There may be a verb tense in your language with a similar form, but the meaning is probably NOT the same.
Note: When we want to give or ask details about when, where, who, we use the simple past. Read more about choosing between the present perfect and the simple past tenses.
Read more about using the present perfect with the words "ever", "never", "already", and "yet", and about using the present perfect with the words "for" and "since".
The present perfect of any verb is composed of two elements : the appropriate form of the auxiliary verb to have (present tense), plus the past participle of the main verb. The past participle of a regular verb is base+ed, e.g. played, arrived, looked. For irregular verbs, see the Table of irregular verbs in the section called 'Verbs'.
Affirmative | ||
Subject | +to have | +past participle |
She | has | visited. |
Negative | ||
Subject | +to have + not | +past participle |
She | has not (hasn't) | visited. |
Interrogative | ||
to have | +subject | +past participle |
Has | she | visited? |
Negative interrogative | ||
to have + not | +subject | +past participle |
Hasn't | she | visited? |
Affirmative | Negative | Interrogative |
---|---|---|
I have walked | I haven't walked | Have I walked? |
You have walked | You haven't walked. | Have you walked? |
He, she, it has walked | He, she, hasn't walked | Has he, she, it walked? |
We have walked | We haven't walked | Have we walked? |
You have walked | You haven't walked | Have you walked? |
They have walked | They haven't walked | Have they walked? |
Present perfect is a useful tense that talks about an action that happened in an indefinite time in the past. In this lesson, we will learn more about them.
The past participle is the third principal part of a verb that is most commonly known to be used with tenses. In this lesson, we will learn all about them.
There are similarities and differences between past simple and present perfect, which might cause confusion.
There are similarities and differences between present simple and present perfect, which might cause confusion.
There are similarities and differences between present perfect and past perfect, which might cause confusion.
There are similarities and differences between present continuous and present perfect, which might cause confusion.
There are similarities and differences between present perfect and present perfect continuous, which might cause confusion.
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