What tenses to use at what time?
What tenses to use at what time?
To master English perfectly and understand when to use the present, the past or the future, there are some rules.
Conjugation in English seems simpler than in Spanish, since there are fewer tenses and fewer conjugated forms to learn. However, it remains complex.
The present simple is used for three main reasons: What tenses to use at what time?
Describe a habit, a repetition: He smokes every day.
A state or a general truth: The sky is blue.
An official future action, which will inevitably happen: The plane leaves at 8pm tomorrow .
The past simple is used for two reasons:
A past action, which already occurred at a specific time: I watched a movie yesterday.
A past custom unrelated to the present: I lived in Madrid before my moving to Barcelona .
This is complicated by the use of the present continuous :
To designate an action in progress : I am playing football in the park.
A description in the present: She is listening to music.
A near future with a notion of intention: I am leaving to the USA tomorrow.
The past continuous meets the same rules (except the future):
The past action that was happening: I was having a bath when someone rang the door.
A description in the past: She was wearing a blue scarf .
The present perfect is used to connect the past with the present: I have bought you something . Often used with ever / never, already / yet, it is the first time, for / since, and just .
The present perfect continuous is used to designate an action that started before the moment of speaking and has not finished yet: How long have you been waiting for him?
The future is expressed in many ways:
With the modal will for an instant decision, a prediction or to show your determination ( I will pass this exam ).
With going to : to mark the intention or a prediction resulting from an observation ( Look at the sky: it is going to rain! ).
With the present continuous as we have already said.
With to be to express the will of others ( I am to pick up at 5am ).
With to be about to to express an immediate future: I’m about to cry ( I’m about to cry ).
If you can understand and use these forms without errors, you can move on to studying the conditional and subjunctive without worry!