Introduction
In this chapter, we will take a look at the general structure or formula of the Present Perfect Tense with lots of examples. We will cover the structure or formula for all the Present Perfect Tense sentence types, such as Positive, Negative, Interrogative, and Interrogative Positive sentence types.
What is the Present Perfect Tense?
The present perfect tense (also known as the present perfect simple) connects the past with the present. It indicates that an action or event has happened at some point before now but is still relevant or has an impact on the present situation.
General Structure/Formula
[Subject] + [has/have] + [Past Participle of Verb] + [Object]
Examples
| Subject | Helping Verb (has/have) | Past Participle | Object |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | have | eaten | breakfast. |
| We | have | finished | our homework. |
| You | have | visited | Paris. |
| He | has | read | the book. |
| She | has | watched | the movie. |
| It | has | broken | down. |
| They | have | won | the match. |
Types of Sentences
1. Positive Sentences
Positive sentences state that something has happened at some point before now.
Structure:
- Subject + has/have + past participle + Object
Examples:
| Subject | Helping Verb | Past Participle | Object |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | have | eaten | breakfast. |
| We | have | finished | our homework. |
| You | have | visited | Paris. |
| He | has | read | the book. |
| She | has | watched | the movie. |
| It | has | broken | down. |
| They | have | won | the match. |
2. Negative Sentences
Negative sentences state that something has not happened at some point before now.
Structure:
- Subject + has/have + not + past participle + Object
Examples:
| Subject | Helping Verb | not | Past Participle | Object |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | have | not | eaten | breakfast. |
| We | have | not | finished | our homework. |
| You | have | not | visited | Paris. |
| He | has | not | read | the book. |
| She | has | not | watched | the movie. |
| It | has | not | broken | down. |
| They | have | not | won | the match. |
3. Interrogative Sentences
Interrogative sentences ask questions about actions that have happened at some point before now.
Structure:
- Has/Have + Subject + past participle + Object?
Examples:
| Has/Have | Subject | Past Participle | Object |
|---|---|---|---|
| Have | I | eaten | breakfast? |
| Have | we | finished | our homework? |
| Have | you | visited | Paris? |
| Has | he | read | the book? |
| Has | she | watched | the movie? |
| Has | it | broken | down? |
| Have | they | won | the match? |
4. Interrogative Negative Sentences
Interrogative negative sentences ask negative questions about actions that have happened at some point before now.
Structure:
- Has/Have + Subject + not + past participle + Object?
Examples:
| Has/Have | Subject | not | Past Participle | Object |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Have | I | not | eaten | breakfast? |
| Have | we | not | finished | our homework? |
| Have | you | not | visited | Paris? |
| Has | he | not | read | the book? |
| Has | she | not | watched | the movie? |
| Has | it | not | broken | down? |
| Have | they | not | won | the match? |
Common Mistakes While Learning Present Perfect Tense
1. No Knowledge About Past Participle
Students sometimes use the wrong verb form.
- Incorrect: I have went there.
- Correct: I have gone there.
2. Subject-Verb Agreement Errors
Students often misuse “has” and “have.”
- Incorrect: We has played football.
- Correct: We have played football.
3. Not Knowing the Difference Between Different Forms of Tenses
Confusion between present perfect and past simple.
- Incorrect: I have met Rohit Sharma last week.
- Correct: I met Rohit Sharma last week.
Real-Life Examples
Affirmative Sentences:
- “She has completed her homework.”
- “They have visited the museum.”
- “He has bought a new car.”
Negative Sentences:
- “I have not seen that movie.”
- “We have not finished our project.”
- “She has not been to London.”
Interrogative Sentences:
- “Have you read this book?”
- “Has he arrived yet?”
- “Have they left for the trip?”
Interrogative Negative Sentences:
- “Have you not completed your assignment?”
- “Has she not called you?”
- “Have they not checked in yet?”
Summary Table for Types of Sentences
Here is a summary table to help understand the different types of sentences in the present perfect tense:
| Type | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Affirmative | Subject + has/have + past participle + Object | “She has watched the movie.” |
| Negative | Subject + has/have + not + past participle + Object | “She has not watched the movie.” |
| Interrogative | Has/Have + Subject + past participle + Object? | “Has she watched the movie?” |
| Interrogative Negative | Has/Have + Subject + not + past participle + Object? | “Has she not watched the movie?” |
Understanding and practicing these structures will help you effectively use the present perfect tense to communicate actions that are relevant to the present.