lunes, 29 de septiembre de 2025

ALL ABOUT PRESENT PERFECT

 




1. Form

The Present Perfect is formed with the auxiliary verb “have/has” + past participle of the main verb.

  • Affirmative:
    Subject + have/has + past participle
    • I have seen that movie.
    • She has finished her homework.
  • Negative:
    Subject + have/has + not + past participle
    • I have not (haven’t) seen that movie.
    • He has not (hasn’t) finished his homework.
  • Interrogative:
    Have/Has + subject + past participle?
    • Have you seen that movie?
    • Has she finished her homework?

 

2. Uses

The Present Perfect connects the past with the present. It is used in these main situations:

1. Life experiences (without saying exactly when).

o   I have visited Paris.

o   She has never tried sushi.

2. Recent actions (often with just, already, yet).

o   I have just finished my work.

o   She has already left.

o   Have you eaten yet?

3. Unfinished time periods (this week, today, this year, etc.).

o   I have read three books this month.

o   He has worked hard today.

4. Actions that started in the past and continue in the present (often with for and since).

o   I have lived here for ten years.

o   She has worked at that company since 2015.

 

3. Signal Words

Common expressions that usually appear with Present Perfect:

  • ever, never
  • just, already, yet
  • for, since
  • so far, up to now, until now
  • today, this week, this month, this year

 

4. Past Simple vs. Present Perfect

  • Past Simple is used when the time is finished or specified:
    • I visited Paris last year.
  • Present Perfect is used when the time is not specified or still continues:
    • I have visited Paris (at some point in my life).

 

El Presente Perfecto

1. Forma

El Presente Perfecto en inglés se forma con el verbo auxiliar have/has + participio pasado.
En español, se traduce como el pretérito perfecto compuesto:
haber (he/has/ha/hemos/han) + participio.

  • Afirmativa:
    I have eaten → He comido
    She has finished → Ella ha terminado
  • Negativa:
    I haven’t eaten → No he comido
    He hasn’t finished → Él no ha terminado
  • Interrogativa:
    Have you eaten? → ¿Has comido?
    Has she finished?
    → ¿Ha terminado ella?

 

2. Usos

El Present Perfect conecta el pasado con el presente, igual que en español. Sus usos principales:

1. Experiencias de vida (sin decir cuándo exactamente):

o   I have visited Paris → He visitado París.

o   She has never tried sushi → Ella nunca ha probado sushi.

2. Acciones recientes (con just, already, yet):

o   I have just finished → Acabo de terminar.

o   She has already left → Ella ya se ha ido.

o   Have you eaten yet? → ¿Ya has comido?

3. Períodos de tiempo que no han terminado:

o   I have read three books this month → He leído tres libros este mes.

o   He has worked hard today → Él ha trabajado mucho hoy.

4. Acciones que empezaron en el pasado y siguen en el presente (con for y since):

o   I have lived here for ten years → He vivido aquí por diez años.

o   She has worked here since 2015 → Ella ha trabajado aquí desde 2015.

 

3. Palabras clave

  • ever, never → alguna vez, nunca
  • just → justo, acabar de
  • already → ya
  • yet → todavía, ya
  • for → durante, por
  • since → desde
  • this week, this year → esta semana, este año

 

4. Diferencia con el Pasado Simple

  • Past Simple (pasado simple): para acciones en un tiempo terminado.
    • I visited Paris last year → Visité París el año pasado.
  • Present Perfect (presente perfecto): para experiencias o acciones con conexión al presente.
    • I have visited Paris → He visitado París (no importa cuándo).