Course Content
English Grammar Mastery: From Foundations to Fluency

1️⃣ Lesson Overview

In this lesson, you will learn how the English tense system works. Tenses allow speakers and writers to describe when an action happens, how long it continues, and how it relates to other actions.

English verbs express meaning through a combination of tense and aspect.

  • Tense indicates the time of an action (present or past).

  • Aspect describes how the action unfolds over time (completed, ongoing, or repeated).

Understanding this system allows learners to express time relationships clearly and accurately.

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

✅ understand the difference between tense and aspect
✅ recognise the twelve traditional English tense forms
✅ understand how time expressions guide tense selection
✅ identify common signal words used with different tenses


2️⃣ Concept Introduction

Consider the following sentences:

The scientist studies climate change.
The scientist is studying climate change.
The scientist has studied climate change for ten years.

Each sentence describes the same activity but expresses different time relationships.

Sentence Meaning
studies general activity
is studying action happening now
has studied action connected to the present

These differences occur because of different tense–aspect combinations.


3️⃣ Core Explanation – Tense vs Aspect

The English verb system is based on two key concepts: tense and aspect.

Concept Function Example
tense indicates time past / present
aspect shows how an action unfolds continuous / perfect

Example:

She writes reports.
Present tense + simple aspect

She is writing a report.
Present tense + continuous aspect

She has written a report.
Present tense + perfect aspect

These combinations create different tense forms.


4️⃣ The Twelve Traditional English Tenses

English grammar traditionally describes twelve tense–aspect combinations.

Time Simple Continuous Perfect Perfect Continuous
Present present simple present continuous present perfect present perfect continuous
Past past simple past continuous past perfect past perfect continuous
Future future simple future continuous future perfect future perfect continuous

Example:

Tense Example
Present simple She studies biology.
Present continuous She is studying biology.
Present perfect She has studied biology.
Present perfect continuous She has been studying biology.

5️⃣ The Role of Time Expressions

Time expressions often help determine which tense should be used.

Time Expression Typical Tense
always, usually, often present simple
now, currently, at the moment present continuous
already, yet, just present perfect
since, for present perfect
yesterday, last week past simple
while, when past continuous
before, after past perfect
tomorrow, next year future forms

Example sentences:

She usually studies in the evening.
The team is currently analysing the data.
They completed the project yesterday.


6️⃣ Time Lines and Action Relationships

Understanding tense also involves recognising relationships between actions.

Example:

She completed the report before the meeting started.

Action Time Relationship
completed the report earlier action
meeting started later action

The earlier action may require a perfect tense.

Example:

She had completed the report before the meeting started.

This structure clarifies the sequence of events.


7️⃣ Signal Words and Time Adverbs

Signal words often indicate which tense is appropriate.

Tense Common Signal Words
present simple always, often, usually, generally
present continuous now, currently, at the moment
present perfect already, yet, just, recently
present perfect continuous since, for
past simple yesterday, last night, in 2020
past continuous while, when
past perfect before, after
future forms tomorrow, next week, soon

Example:

The researchers are currently analysing the results.

The word currently suggests the present continuous tense.


8️⃣ Common Errors

Common Error 1: Using Present Continuous for General Truths

Incorrect:
Water is boiling at 100°C.

Correct:
Water boils at 100°C.

Explanation:
General facts require the present simple tense.


Common Error 2: Using Present Simple for Actions Happening Now

Incorrect:
She writes the report now.

Correct:
She is writing the report now.

Explanation:
Actions happening at the moment require present continuous.


Common Error 3: Incorrect Use of Present Perfect with Specific Time

Incorrect:
She has completed the experiment yesterday.

Correct:
She completed the experiment yesterday.

Explanation:
Specific past time expressions require past simple.


Common Error 4: Using Past Simple Instead of Present Perfect

Incorrect:
I finished the project already.

Correct:
I have already finished the project.

Explanation:
Words such as already often appear with present perfect.


Common Error 5: Confusing Past Perfect and Past Simple

Incorrect:
She completed the report before the meeting started earlier.

Correct:
She had completed the report before the meeting started.

Explanation:
Past perfect clarifies which action occurred first.


9️⃣ Lesson Mastery

After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:

✅ understand the structure of the English tense system
✅ distinguish between tense and aspect
✅ recognise the twelve traditional tense forms
✅ identify common time expressions associated with different tenses

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