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In
this week’s episode of Everyday Grammar we’re going to help you
understand the difference between the simple past and the present
perfect. English learners often confuse these two verb tenses.
Let’s start with an example. Can you tell the difference between these
two sentences?
Sentence one: I saw the movie.
Sentence two: I have seen the movie.
Sentence one uses the simple past tense. Sentence two uses the present
perfect tense.
“I saw the movie” and “I have seen the movie” both refer to an action
that was finished in the past. But there is one important difference: “I
saw the movie” suggests that you saw the movie at a specific time in the
past. “I have seen the movie” suggests that you saw the movie at an
unknown time in the past.
Use the simple past to talk about a finished action that happened at a
specific time. For example, “I went out with my friends last night.” The
adverb “last night” is not required, but it does help clarify that the
event happened at a specific time.
That’s the easy part. Now let’s talk about the present perfect. You form
the present perfect by using “have” or “has” followed by the past
participle form of the verb. For example, “I have graduated from college.”
The present perfect confuses English learners because it refers to a
past action. It is also called “present perfect” because speakers use it
to stress the importance of a past event in the present. The sentence “I
have graduated from college,” emphasizes the present effect of a past
event -- graduation. The exact time of the graduation is not important.
There are four more common situations that require the present perfect.
First, it can express a repeated action. When an action happened more
than one time in the past, use the present perfect. For example, “I have
seen the movie three times”.
Second, it is common to use the present perfect with the words “for” and
“since.” “For” and “since” are adverbs that tell about the duration of
an activity. They answer the question “how long?” For example, “I have
studied English for a long time”.
Third, the negative adverb “never” requires the present perfect. You can
say, “I have never been to France.” You would not say, “I did never go
to France.”
Finally, when asking a question in the present perfect, use “ever,” as
in, “Have you ever won the lottery?” Listen for the present perfect
question in this song by the American rock band Creedence Clearwater
Revival.
I wanna know have you ever seen the rain?
I wanna know have you ever seen the rain
Coming down on a sunny day?
In an informal situation, you can take out the word “have” in a present
perfect question. Listen to actor Jack Nicholson playing the Joker in
the 1989 movie Batman. Before the Joker takes his victims, he asks them
an unusual question.
Tell me something, my friend. You ever danced with the devil in the pale
moonlight?
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