Maya has finished her

perfect present tense

 

Subject
Topic
Level
Highschool
Grade
11

Present Perfect tense | Part 1 - Form

Here is an English grammar lesson about the form of the present perfect tense. In this lesson, you will learn the affirmative form (positive), question form and ...

Answer

Present Perfect Tense

The present perfect tense refers to an action or state that either occurred at an indefinite time in the past (e.g., we have talked before) or began in the past and continued to the present time (e.g., he has grown impatient over the last hour). This tense is formed by have/has + the past participle.

The construction of this verb tense is straightforward. The first element is have or has, depending on the subject the verb is conjugated with. The second element is the past participle of the verb, which is usually formed by adding -ed or -d to the verb’s root (e.g., walked, cleaned, typed, perambulated, jumped, laughed, sautéed) although English does have quite a few verbs that have irregular past participles (e.g., done, said, gone, known, won, thought, felt, eaten).

These examples show how the present perfect can describe something that occurred or was the state of things at an unspecified time in the past.

 

I have walked on this path before.
We have eaten the lasagna here.

 

The important thing to remember about the present perfect is that you can’t use it when you are being specific about when it happened.

 

Correct: I have put away all the laundry.
Incorrect: I have put away all the laundry this morning.

 

You can use the present perfect to talk about the duration of something that started in the past is still happening.

 

She has had the chickenpox since Tuesday.

Steps

 

  1. Maya has finished her
  2. Using the present perfect tense.
  3. Maya has finished her homework.

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