Chapter in 30 Seconds
Master the art of talking about your habits, your current actions, and your life experiences.
- Distinguish between repeated habits and actions happening right now.
- Formulate questions about life experiences using the present perfect.
- Identify when to use specific time markers like 'yesterday' versus 'never'.
배울 내용
Master the three key present tenses: when to use present simple for habits, present continuous for now, and present perfect for life experiences and recent events.
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Present Simple vs Present Continuous: What is the Difference?Present simple = habits and facts. Present continuous = actions happening right now or temporary situations.
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Present Perfect: Have You Ever...? (Form and Use)Present perfect connects the past to now. Use have/has + past participle for experiences, recent events, and situations that are still true.
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Present Perfect or Past Simple? Choosing the Right TensePast simple = finished action with a specific time. Present perfect = connected to now, no specific time given.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this chapter, you will be able to:
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1
By the end you will be able to: describe a daily routine versus an action happening at this moment.
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2
By the end you will be able to: recount a personal life experience using the present perfect.
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3
By the end you will be able to: choose correctly between past simple and present perfect in a short story.
주요 예문 (6)
I usually walk to work, but today I am taking the bus.
She works in a hospital.
Have you ever been to Italy?
I have never tried skydiving.
I visited Rome in 2018.
I have visited Rome.
팁과 요령 (3)
Check the Time Marker
Focus on Experience
The 'Time' Test
핵심 어휘 (6)
Real-World Preview
Coffee Shop Catch-up
Review Summary
- Simple: S+V(s) / Continuous: S+am/is/are+V-ing
- S+have/has+V(past participle)
- Past Simple = finished time; Present Perfect = no specific time
자주 하는 실수
Stative verbs like 'know', 'love', and 'want' usually do not take the continuous form.
You cannot use a specific past time marker like 'yesterday' with the present perfect.
The present perfect requires the past participle (gone), not the past simple (went).
이 챕터의 규칙 (3)
Next Steps
You have done an excellent job mastering the present tenses. Keep practicing by observing how native speakers use these in podcasts and movies!
Write a diary entry for today
빠른 연습 (10)
Which is correct?
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Perfect: Have You Ever...? (Form and Use)
Find and fix the mistake:
I have been to Paris in 2015.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Perfect or Past Simple? Choosing the Right Tense
I have ___ been to Rome.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Perfect: Have You Ever...? (Form and Use)
___ you ever ___ sushi?
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Perfect or Past Simple? Choosing the Right Tense
Find and fix the mistake:
She have seen the movie.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Perfect: Have You Ever...? (Form and Use)
I ___ (eat) sushi before.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Perfect: Have You Ever...? (Form and Use)
I ___ (eat) breakfast every day.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Simple vs Present Continuous: What is the Difference?
Which is correct?
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Simple vs Present Continuous: What is the Difference?
I ___ (see) that movie last night.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Perfect or Past Simple? Choosing the Right Tense
He ___ just left.
frontend.learn_grammar.from_rule: Present Perfect: Have You Ever...? (Form and Use)
Score: /10