English Grammar Zone

Tense Chart With Rules And Examples

What is tense?

Tense refers to the grammatical category that shows the time of an action, event, or condition. It is used to express when an action occurs, whether in the past, present, or future. Each verb tense has a specific form and structure that conveys this information.

Types of Tenses

English has three main types of tenses, each divided into four aspects:

  1. Present Tense: Actions happening now.
  2. Past Tense: Actions that happened before now.
  3. Future Tense: Actions that will happen later.

Each of these is further categorized into four aspects:

 

tense chart with rules and examples Tense chart with rules and examples

 

Tense Type Simple Continuous Perfect Perfect Continuous
Present Present Simple Present Continuous Present Perfect Present Perfect Continuous
Past Past Simple Past Continuous Past Perfect Past Perfect Continuous
Future Future Simple Future Continuous Future Perfect Future Perfect Continuous

Tense Chart With Rules And Examples

1. Present Simple

2. Present Continuous

3. Present Perfect

4. Present Perfect Continuous

5. Past Simple

6. Past Continuous

7. Past Perfect

8. Past Perfect Continuous

9. Future Simple

10. Future Continuous

11. Future Perfect

12. Future Perfect Continuous

Common Mistakes When Using Tenses

  1. Confusing Past Simple and Present Perfect:
    • Incorrect: I visited Paris last year.
    • Correct: I visited Paris last year.
  1. Using Future Tense After “If” in Conditional Sentences:
    • Incorrect: If it will rain, we will cancel the trip.
    • Correct: If it rains, we will cancel the trip.
  1. Mixing up Continuous and Perfect Tenses:
    • Incorrect: She was working there since 2010.
    • Correct: She has been working there since 2010.

Tense Chart Overview

Tense Example Sentence
Present Simple She writes emails every day.
Present Continuous She is writing an email right now.
Present Perfect She has written three emails today.
Present Perfect Continuous She has been writing emails for the past hour.
Past Simple She wrote an email yesterday.
Past Continuous She was writing an email when I called.
Past Perfect She had written the email before the meeting.
Past Perfect Continuous She had been writing emails before the power went out.
Future Simple She will write an email tomorrow.
Future Continuous She will be writing an email at 3 p.m.
Future Perfect She will have written the email by the time you arrive.
Future Perfect Continuous She will have been writing emails for three hours by 4 p.m.

 

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