Abrir Ejercicios Present Perfect 4 ESO | Exercices
El Present Perfect es un tiempo verbal que se usa para hablar de acciones que han sucedido en un momento indefinido en el pasado. En inglés, el Present Perfect se forma con el verbo to have en la forma correcta (sujeto + have/has + participio pasado) + objeto. Por ejemplo:
I have finished my homework.
You have drawn a picture.
She has written a letter.
El Present Perfect se usa con adverbios de tiempo como: always, ever, just, never, yet, already, recently, lately. Los adverbios de tiempo nos dan más información sobre cuándo sucedió la acción. Por ejemplo:
I have just finished my homework.
You have ever been to London?
She has already written a letter.
En el Present Perfect, el verbo to be se usa en la forma correcta del Presente Simple:
I am here.
You are at school.
She is at home.
Para negar el Present Perfect, se usa la forma correcta del verbo to have + not + participio pasado. Por ejemplo:
I have not (haven’t) finished my homework.
You have not (haven’t) been to London?
She has not (hasn’t) written a letter.
En el Present Perfect, el verbo to have se usa en la forma correcta del Presente Simple:
I am here.
You are at school.
She is at home.
Para preguntar en el Present Perfect, se usa la forma correcta del verbo to have + sujeto + participio pasado. Por ejemplo:
Have you finished your homework?
Has she written a letter?
Ejercicios Resueltos Present Perfect Ingles 4 Eso
The Present Perfect is a verb tense which is used to show that an action has taken place, or has been completed, at some point in the past. The action could have happened at any time, and we use the Present Perfect to show that it is finished.
We often use the Present Perfect with already, just, and yet. We also use it when we don’t want to say when something happened, or when it is not important.
The Present Perfect is made from the Present Simple of have or has and the past participle of a verb:
- I have worked in that company for two years.
- They have gone out for lunch.
- We have lived in London for six months.
The Present Perfect is used:
- with already, just, and yet to make it clear if an action has happened or not:
- I have just finished my lunch.
- I haven’t finished my lunch yet.
- I have already seen that film.
- to say how many times something has happened:
- I have been to France three times.
- I have seen that film twice.
- to talk about past experiences:
- I have played tennis since I was a child.
- They have known each other for a long time.
- to talk about past actions which are still true in the present:
- I have worked in that company for two years.
- We have lived in London for six months.
The Present Perfect is often used with just, already, and yet. We use just to mean a short time ago, already to mean before now, and yet to mean up to now:
- I have just seen that film. (I saw it a short time ago)
- I have already seen that film. (I saw it before now)
- I haven’t seen that film yet. (I haven’t seen it up to now)
We use already and yet in questions and negative sentences:
- Have you seen that film already?
- Have you seen that film yet?
- I haven’t seen that film yet.
- He hasn’t finished his work yet.
We use just in positive sentences:
- I have just seen that film.
- She has just finished her work.
We use already and yet at the end of a sentence:
- I haven’t seen that film yet.
- He hasn’t finished his work yet.
We use just at the beginning or in the middle of a sentence:
- Just a moment ago, I saw that film.
- I saw that film just a moment ago.
We often use already, just, and yet with the Present Perfect Continuous:
- I have been studying English for two years already.
- I have been studying English for two years yet.
- I have just been studying English for two years.
We use for and since with the Present Perfect to say how long something has been happening:
- for with periods of time: two days, three weeks, four months, five years
- since with a point in time: 9 o’clock, Monday, January, 1986
We use since with the Present Perfect Continuous, but we use for with the Present Perfect:
- I have been studying English since 9 o’clock.
- I have studied English for two hours.