Uses of Tenses
Uses of Tenses
Uses of Tenses
It is often used with adverbs or adverb phrases such as: “always, never, occasionally,
often, sometimes, usually, every week, on Mondays, twice a year etc.”
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ii. To give a series of actions in the order that they happened.
o She went home, met her mother, had dinner and slept at 10 pm.
3. The -be going to form – for planned events (especially intentions and
decisions)
o I am meeting my friend tonight. (emphasis on arrangement)
o I am going to meet my friend tonight. (emphasis on intention)
o Look at the sky. It is going to rain. (prediction based on evidence)
To express the future in the past, we use ‘would’ and ‘was V 1ing (to)’.
o I had no time to meet you all because I was leaving for Delhi in two hours.
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4 The Present Continuous
i. A temporary action or event that is happening at the time of speaking.
o I am watching a game.
o She is waiting for the bus.
iv. Definite arrangements in the near future. (the most usual way of
expressing one’s immediate plans)
o I am going to meet my friend tomorrow.
o I am going home tomorrow.
ii. It is often used together with the simple past tense. The past
continuous refers to a longer ‘background’ action; the simple refers to
a shorter action that happened in the middle of the longer action, or
that interrupted it. We often use words like when, while and as.
o When I was crossing over the road, I witnessed an accident.
o I met her on train when I was travelling to Chennai.
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6 The Future Continuous
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ii. To talk about an action as a life experience, without referring to a
specific time/occasion the action took place. (We don’t state when it
happened. We might have done it more than once. We might repeat
the same in the future)
o I have been to Australia. o She has lived in India.
o I have visited Tajmahal . (=implies that it is still possible to visit again)
o The writer has written 50 books. (=implies that he can write
more. If he is dead, the sentence should be ‘he wrote 50 books’)
iii. Unfinished actions which last throughout an incomplete period.
(begins in the past and continues past the time of speaking in the
present)
o She has lived here for four years. (= She still lives)
o I have known her since 2011.
Notes: Difference between the simple past and the present perfect
The simple past is used to talk about only past actions. The present perfect
connects the past with the present.
In the simple past, we must use time expressions to show the time is finished
and to show when the actions happened. We don’t use time expressions,
except for time expressions that show the unfinished time such as this week,
today,etc.
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8 The Past Perfect
Now
i. When we talk about two actions that happened in the past, the first
completed action should be expressed in the past perfect tense, and the
second in the simple past. (Both actions happened in the past)
o When I arrived home, my friends had already left . (=before I got home)
o When I arrived home, my friends left . (=at the moment, I probably saw them).
o He told her that he had met her in the mall.
The past perfect is used to talk about the first action to avoid confusion
between two actions showing which one happened first.
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10 The Present Perfect Continuous
i. To express an action which began in the past and is still continuing
(with the progress emphasized) . We use the present perfect continuous to
look back on actions from the present and often use ‘for’ and ‘since’.
o I have been writing essays since morning.
o She has been waiting for 8 hours.
Now
She had been teaching at a school before she joined the university.
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