English Tenses

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About Course

This course provides a comprehensive overview of the 12 English verb tenses, equipping high school students with the tools to express time and action clearly and accurately. Through engaging examples and structured practice, learners will master the distinctions between simple, continuous, perfect, and perfect continuous forms across present, past, and future contexts. By the end of the course, students will confidently apply these tenses in writing, speaking, and comprehension tasks, enhancing both fluency and grammatical precision.

Course Content

Present Indefinite or Simple
Describes habits, routines, and general truths. Example: She writes every day.

  • Introduction
  • Description

Present Continuous
Describes actions happening now or temporary situations. Example: She is writing a letter.

Present Perfect
Describes actions completed at an unspecified time with relevance to the present. Example: She has written three poems.

Present Perfect Continuous
Describes actions that started in the past and continue into the present. Example: She has been writing since morning.

Past Indefinite or Simple
Describes completed actions in the past. Example: She wrote a story yesterday.

Past Continuous
Describes ongoing actions in the past, often interrupted. Example: She was writing when I called.

Past Perfect
Describes actions completed before another past action. Example: She had written the essay before dinner.

Past Perfect Continuous
Describes ongoing actions that were happening before another past event. Example: She had been writing for hours before the power went out.

Future Indefinite or Simple
Describes actions that will happen. Example: She will write tomorrow.

Future Continuous
Describes actions that will be ongoing at a future time. Example: She will be writing at 5 PM.

Future Perfect
Describes actions that will be completed before a future time. Example: She will have written the report by Monday.

Future Perfect Continuous
Describes actions that will be ongoing until a future point. Example: She will have been writing for two hours by noon.