1. Simple Past vs. Present Perfect. Past With Used to. Past Simple and Continuous Time Expressions - Free download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or view presentation slides online. Past Simple and Continuous Time Expressions. T057-Past and Past Perfect Tense Elementary . Future Tense . T126 - Future Perfect Tense Intermediate; T122 - Future Forms Elementary; T069 - Future Simple and Progressive , Future Perfect Intermediate; T060 - Wind Farms - Future Tenses Elementary; T059-Homes of the Future - Future, Future Continuous and Future Perfect Intermediate . All Tenses Past perfect form: I had seen. You had seen. He/she/it had seen. We had seen. They had seen. The past perfect is usually used in combination with another past action in the simple past. Using the past perfect allows us to show which action happened first. The past perfect action happened before the simple past action. The Future Perfect Continuous Tense is a verb tense that describes actions that will continue up until a point in the future. It is also sometimes called the Future Perfect Progressive. Structure of the Tense. The example we looked at above was a positive sentence, but future perfect continuous tense sentences can also be negative and interrogative. Here are some examples of all three. Notice that 'will not' can get contacted to 'won't' and 'pronoun + will' can get contracted e.g. ' she'll'. Present Continuous for the future. We can also use the Present Continuous tense to talk about the future - if we add a future word!! We must add (or understand from the context) a future word. "Future words" include, for example, tomorrow, next year, in June, at Christmas etc. We only use the Present Continuous tense to talk about the future ij2CkIU.

future perfect continuous tense time expressions