1. Lesson Overview
In this lesson, you will study the present perfect tense, which connects past actions to the present moment. Unlike the past simple tense, which describes completed actions at a definite time in the past, the present perfect focuses on results, experiences, and situations that continue into the present.
The present perfect tense is formed using have / has + past participle.
This tense is widely used to express:
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life experiences
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recently completed actions
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actions with present results
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situations that began in the past and continue today
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
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form the present perfect tense correctly
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understand when to use the present perfect instead of the past simple
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recognise common signal words and time expressions associated with this tense
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avoid common learner errors involving present perfect
2. Concept Introduction
Consider the following sentences:
She completed the experiment yesterday.
She has completed the experiment.
| Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| She completed the experiment yesterday | past simple – finished in the past |
| She has completed the experiment | present perfect – result is important now |
The second sentence emphasises the present result of the completed action.
Example:
The researchers have discovered a new method.
The discovery happened in the past, but its importance exists in the present.
3. Core Explanation
The present perfect tense expresses actions that:
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occurred in the past
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have relevance or connection to the present
The structure is:
subject + have / has + past participle
Example:
The scientist has published several articles.
| Component | Example |
|---|---|
| subject | the scientist |
| auxiliary verb | has |
| past participle | published |
4. Rule Table
Affirmative Structure
| Subject | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
| I / You / We / They | have + past participle | They have analysed the data. |
| He / She / It | has + past participle | She has completed the report. |
Negative Structure
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| subject + have not + past participle | They have not finished the project. |
| subject + has not + past participle | She has not submitted the assignment. |
Interrogative Structure
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| Have + subject + past participle | Have they completed the study? |
| Has + subject + past participle | Has she finished the analysis? |
5. Usage
1. Actions with Present Results
Example:
The technician has repaired the equipment.
The repair happened in the past, but the equipment works now.
2. Life Experiences
Example:
She has visited several research laboratories.
The exact time is not important.
3. Recently Completed Actions
Example:
The team has just completed the experiment.
4. Actions Continuing from the Past
Example:
The researcher has worked at the university for ten years.
The action began in the past and continues today.
5. Unfinished Time Periods
Example:
Scientists have made several discoveries this year.
The year has not finished yet.
6. Signal Words
Certain words frequently indicate the present perfect tense.
| Signal Word | Example |
|---|---|
| already | She has already submitted the report. |
| yet | They have not finished the project yet. |
| just | The technician has just repaired the device. |
| recently | Researchers have recently discovered new evidence. |
| lately | The climate has changed rapidly lately. |
| ever | Have you ever visited a research centre? |
| never | She has never conducted that experiment before. |
| since | She has worked here since 2015. |
| for | The team has studied the problem for years. |
| so far | Scientists have collected significant data so far. |
7. Special Cases
Present Perfect vs Past Simple
| Present Perfect | Past Simple |
|---|---|
| unspecified past time | specific past time |
| connection to present | finished past event |
Example:
She has written three articles.
(time not specified)
She wrote three articles last year.
Using “Since” and “For”
| Expression | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| since | starting point | since 2020 |
| for | duration | for five years |
Example:
The researcher has worked here since 2018.
8. Additional Notes
The present perfect is commonly used in academic writing and professional communication because it emphasises current relevance.
Example:
Researchers have identified several causes of climate change.
The discoveries are important now.
9. Common Errors
⚠ Using present perfect with specific past time
Incorrect:
She has finished the report yesterday.
Correct:
She finished the report yesterday.
Explanation:
Specific past time requires past simple.
⚠ Incorrect past participle
Incorrect:
She has wrote the report.
Correct:
She has written the report.
Explanation:
Present perfect requires the past participle.
⚠ Incorrect auxiliary verb
Incorrect:
She have completed the project.
Correct:
She has completed the project.
Explanation:
Third-person singular requires has.
⚠ Confusing “since” and “for”
Incorrect:
She has worked here for 2019.
Correct:
She has worked here since 2019.
Explanation:
Since refers to a starting point.
⚠ Using present perfect without auxiliary verb
Incorrect:
She completed many studies.
Correct:
She has completed many studies.
Explanation:
Present perfect requires have / has.
10. Lesson Mastery
After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:
✅ form the present perfect tense correctly
✅ recognise situations where actions connect the past and present
✅ identify common signal words associated with present perfect
✅ distinguish between present perfect and past simple