Form of Present
Perfect
Positive
|
Negative
|
Question
|
|
I / you / we / they
|
I
have spoken.
|
I
have not spoken.
|
Have
I spoken?
|
he / she / it
|
He
has spoken.
|
He
has not spoken.
|
Has
he spoken?
|
For irregular
verbs, use the participle form. For regular verbs, just add “ed”.
Exceptions in
Spelling when Adding ‘ed’
Exceptions in spelling when adding ed
|
Example
|
after
a final e only add d
|
love
– loved
|
final
consonant after a short, stressed vowel
or l as final consonant after a vowel is doubled |
admit
– admitted
travel – travelled |
final y after a consonant becomes i
|
hurry
– hurried
|
Use of Present
Perfect
- puts emphasis on the result
- action that is still going on
- action that stopped recently
- finished action that has an influence on the present
- action that has taken place once, never or several times before the moment of speaking
Signal Words of Present Perfect
already, ever, just, never, not yet, so far, till now, up to now
Activities
- Grammar and five activities from Eclectic English.
- From Perfect English Grammar, different exercises about the form of the present perfect simple.
- From English Grammar 4 You, a bunch of exercises and three level tests.
- A short explanation and several exercises taken from English 4 You.
- From Agendaweb, lots of exercises of all kind about this tense.