Tenses

TENSES Past Tense Simple Continuous Perfect Perfect Continuous Present Tense Simple Continuous Perfect Perfect Continuous Future Tense Simple Continuous Perfect Perfect Continuous The Core of Tenses: What They Are Tenses are the backbone of English grammar. They allow speakers and writers to place actions in time—past, present, or future—and indicate whether those actions are complete, […]

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Passive Voice

Passive Voice The passive voice is a grammatical construction in which the subject of the sentence is the recipient of the action rather than the performer. It is one of the two main voices in English, the other being active voice. In the passive voice, the focus shifts from the doer (agent) to the action

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Active Voice and Passive Voice​

Active Voice and Passive Voice​ In English grammar, voice tells the relationship between the verb (action) and the participants (subject and object) in any sentence. The primary voices are two, active and passive. it is necessary to Understand and use them correctly for effective communication, writing as well speaking. 1. Active Voice When the subject

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Future Perfect Continuous Tense

Future Perfect Continuous Tense The future perfect continuous tense (also called future perfect progressive) is used to describe actions that will have been ongoing for a period of time at a specific point in the future. It emphasizes the duration or continuity of an action up to a certain future time. This tense is especially

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Past Perfect Continuous Tense

Past Perfect Continuous Tense The past perfect continuous tense (also called past perfect progressive) is used to describe actions that started in the past, continued for some time, and ended before another action or point in the past. It emphasizes the duration or continuity of an activity before something else happened. This tense is useful

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Present Perfect Continuous Tense

Present Perfect Continuous Tense The present perfect continuous is used to describe actions that started in the past and are still happening now or were going on recently and have visible results in the present. It connects past duration with present time and emphasizes how long an action has been in progress. Structure Subject + has/have

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Future Perfect Tense

Future Perfect Tense The future perfect tense is used to show that an action will be completed before a specific time or event in the future. It helps describe deadlines, future achievements, expectations, predictions, and planned results. The tense emphasizes that something will be finished before another future moment begins. Structure Subject + will have

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Past Perfect Tense

Past Perfect Tense The past perfect tense is used to show that one action happened before another action or time in the past. It creates a clear sequence of past events and removes confusion about which event occurred first. This tense is especially useful in storytelling, reporting events, writing academic analysis, and describing cause-and-effect relationships

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Present Perfect Tense

Present Perfect Tense The Present Perfect Tense is used to link past actions or experiences with the present moment. It shows that something happened in the past, but its effect, result, or relevance continues now. The action may be recently completed, repeated over time, or still ongoing. Because of this connection between past and present,

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Future Continuous Tense​

Future Continuous Tense  The future continuous (also called future progressive) describes actions that will be in progress at a specific time in the future. It shows duration, ongoing activity, or temporary future situations. While the future simple expresses a single future event, the future continuous highlights that the action will be happening over a period

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