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Raen Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

Names of different tenses

if there are any. I believe there are, and saw them mentioned in different posts on the forum although didn't pay attention to them. The grammar book I'm studying all lump them up into one catagory: helping verbs. But I'd like to know if most people have and use names for the different types of tenses. Here are the sample sentences I wish to know the names of the tenses they are of:

I am taking her to the movie.

He will be working for your father's law firm.

I took the test and passed!

She has taken the medicine for her cold.

She had taken the job before she moved here.

I have been thinking about going abroad for higher education.

He had been living in France before he was caught.

It would have cost me a fortune to buy that coat.

He would have had completed the task if he had asked for help.

It would have been better if we had gone.

I learned the names of these tenses in my own language, but I don't know the English name for each tense(except past tense) . Thanks for anyone's help.

Raen
  

Top answer

I am taking her to the movie. continuous / progressive present or present continuous / progressive He will be working for your father's law firm. future continuous / progressive I took the test and passed !

  • I am taking her to the movie.
  • continuous / progressive present or present continuous / progressive He will be working for your father's law firm.
  • future continuous / progressive I took the test and passed !
  • simple past She has taken the medicine for her cold.
  • [present] perfect She had taken the job before she moved here.
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8 Answers
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I am taking her to the movie. continuous / progressive present or present continuous / progressive

He will be working for your father's law firm. future continuous / progressive

I took the test and passed! simple past

She has taken the medicine for her cold. [present] perfect

She had taken the
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Thank you so much CB, I'm taking them all in now. But,

In the one sentence you crossed out the word "had", I was taught it had to be present to differentiate the order of occuraces or actions taken place in a sentence that has more than 1 clause. Let me expand on it by ways of examples:

He has taken the job as we speak. -- has taken (perfect tense) happens be
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Here are some Present - Past pairs:
Simple present - Simple past [He takes. He took.]

Present progressive - Past progressive [He is taking. He was taking.]

Present perfect - Past perfect [He has taken. He had taken.]

Present perfect progressive - Past perfect progressive [He has been taking. He had been taking.]

(Simple) Future (of the Present) (will
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RaenHe would have had completed the task if he had asked for help before he left work -- would have had completed used for had asked (past perfect) that happens before left (simple past)

Is it false then? "
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Thank you CJ and CB.

Wow, so it is definitively wrong, I had no idea. I haven't heard this tense (have had + participle) being used in the real world, I thought it was because situation calling for that use was rare or it's too old-fashioned for modern English. Thank you for clearning that up for me.

By the way, you referred the tense as "perfect infinitive". Is perfect infinitiv
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The infinitive is the basic form of a verb. If you don't know a verb and look it up in a dictionary, the dictionary gives you the infinitive, or more precisely the plain/bare present infinitive of the verb in question: speak, know, need etc. The full infinitive has the particle to before it: to speak, to know, to need. In English, the infinitive can never be inflected,
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Thank you CB, I truly appreciate your explanation on "infinitives". That's a lot to take in.

I hope when you said basic things you're only referring to "Germanic language", cause English garmmar is difenitely not basic things for me.

Thanks again.

Raen
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he go to the market

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