Future Perfect

This lesson explains the future perfect in clear, practical English.

Use it for actions that will be completed before a future time or future action.

The main form is: Subject + will have + past participle.

Common time words include by Friday, by tomorrow, before you arrive, by the end of the day, by next month.

You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.

Present Perfect

This lesson explains the present perfect in clear, practical English.

Use it for past actions connected to now, life experience, recent news, and unfinished time.

The main form is: Subject + have or has + past participle.

Common time words include already, yet, just, ever, never, this week, so far, recently.

You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.

Present Perfect Continuous

This lesson explains the present perfect continuous in clear, practical English.

Use it for actions that started in the past and continue now, or recent actions with present evidence.

The main form is: Subject + have or has + been + verb-ing.

Common time words include for two hours, since Monday, all day, recently, lately, how long.

You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.

Past Simple

This lesson explains the past simple in clear, practical English.

Use it for completed actions, past habits, finished routines, and historical facts.

The main form is: Subject + past verb (regular verbs end in -ed, while irregular verbs change form).

Common time words include yesterday, last week, an hour ago, in 2015, when I was young.

You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.

All 12 English Tenses Summary

This summary gives you one clear map for all twelve English tenses.

English tenses combine time: present, past, and future, with aspect: simple, continuous, perfect, and perfect continuous.

Simple tenses focus on facts, routines, completed actions, and basic future meaning.

Continuous tenses focus on actions in progress, while perfect tenses connect one time to another.

Perfect continuous tenses focus on duration before now, before a past time, or before a future time.

Present Continuous

This lesson explains the present continuous in clear, practical English.

Use it for actions happening now, temporary situations, changing situations, and future arrangements.

The main form is: Subject + am, is, or are + verb-ing.

Common time words include now, right now, at the moment, today, this week, currently.

You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.

Future Simple

This lesson explains the future simple in clear, practical English.

Use it for predictions, quick decisions, promises, offers, and future facts.

The main form is: Subject + will + base verb.

Common time words include tomorrow, next week, soon, later, in a few minutes, one day.

You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.

By the end, you should be able to recognize the tense and use it in real sentences.

Present Simple

This lesson explains the present simple in clear, practical English.

Use it for regular habits, facts, routines, schedules, and general truths.

The main form is: Subject + base verb, or subject + verb-s for he, she, it, and singular nouns.

Common time words include every day, usually, often, sometimes, always, never, on Mondays.

You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.

How to Ask Questions and Express Preferences: Adverbs, Object Pronouns, and Imperatives

As a beginner learning English, knowing how to ask questions and express your daily habits is essential for real-world conversation. This comprehensive guide covers how to use adverbs of frequency to accurately describe how often you do things, complete with strict word order rules. We break down the exact sentence structure for asking information questions using the foundational "Wh- words" (who, what, where, when).

Essential English Grammar: Adverbs of Frequency, Wh- Questions, and Object Pronouns

As a beginner learning English, knowing how to ask questions and express your daily habits is essential for real-world conversation. This comprehensive guide covers how to use adverbs of frequency to accurately describe how often you do things, complete with strict word order rules. We break down the exact sentence structure for asking information questions using the foundational "Wh- words" (who, what, where, when).