Transcript for:
Англи хэлний перфект цагуудын тойм

There are 12 basic tenses in English. We  have the present tenses, the past tenses,   and the future tenses. In today's lesson we  are just going to focus on the perfect tenses.   Present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect. By  comparing the perfect tenses, and only the perfect   tenses, we can compare them, and you can see how  similar they are. Which makes them easier to learn.   If you haven't watched my first two videos   simple tenses and continuous tenses, I suggest you  do that first before continuing with this lesson.   And keep your eyes peeled for my upcoming videos  on the other tenses. If you subscribe to my channel   and turn on those notifications you won't  miss a single one. My name's Arnel, let's start. First we will look at the grammatical structures,  and then we will get more specific about how we   use these tenses. Present perfect, past perfect,  future perfect. Present perfect: subject have   or has plus the past participle. Remember to  choose have or has depending on your subject. And that past participle is verb number  three. For example: eat, ate, eaten. Eaten is my   past participle verb number three. I have eaten  at Rosario's. Imagine Rosario's is a restaurant.   Negative: I have not eaten at Rosario's.  Question: Have you eaten at Rosario's? Past perfect: subject had plus past participle.  The good news is we use had for all subjects. I had eaten at Rosario's. Negative:  I had not eaten at Rosario's.   Had you eaten at Rosario's? Future perfect:  subject will have plus past participle.   Again, the good news is we use  will have for all subjects.   I will have eaten at Rosario's. I will not have  eaten at Rosario's. Will you have eaten at Rosario's?   Okay, so we have the grammatical structures, and in  this lesson I will keep the structures highlighted   for you - of course. So how do we use these tenses?  Here I have my timelines: Present, past, and future.   I have eaten at Rosario's, I had eaten at  Rosario's, I will have eaten at Rosario's.   The perfect tenses are really special because  they emphasize an action before something else.   Present perfect, before now. Past  perfect, before another past point.   Future perfect, before another future point.  You can really see how similar these three are. [Music]   I understand. Let's do these one at a time. Present perfect, I have my timeline with the  past and the present. I have been to Paris.   Kim has taken the TOEFL exam. My parents have  seen my new house. He has finished his homework.   I know what some of you are thinking, isn't this  the same as the past simple? Don't worry, we will   compare the past simple and the present perfect  later. All of these actions happened, when? Before   the present. Do we know specifically when? No,  but before now is relevant. What do I mean by   that, before now is relevant? There is a connection  between the past action and the present. So let's   break this down, why would I say I have been to  Paris? Maybe I'm having a coffee break at work and   one of my colleagues keeps talking and talking and  talking and talking about her trip to Paris. And   she says to me: Arnel you have to go to Paris, you  need to go to Paris. I can say: I have been there,   I have been to Paris, in fact I have been there  three times. So you can stop talking about your   trip now. I'm emphasizing before now I have been  there. I'm telling her I have had this experience.   Let's do another example, why would  I say he has finished his homework?   Maybe two parents are talking. Dad: Is it  okay that Louis is playing video games? Mom: Yeah, he has finished his homework. Do we know  specifically when? No, we don't care about   when. But the present is relevant. His past  action means now he can play video games. Okay, it's time for a common question: Past simple  or present perfect? I have two columns here. The present perfect is more general, we are  interested in your past experience. Your past   experience before now. The past simple is more  specific and we need to know specifically when.   So you can see in my examples  here, I'm missing something. I have been to Paris, but I went to Paris in 2003.   Kim has taken the TOEFL exam, but  she took the TOEFL exam last week.   My parents have seen my new house,  they saw my new house on Monday. Louis has finished his homework, he  finished his homework an hour ago.   Even though these are both completed past  actions, the feeling is quite different. The   present perfect is really common in interviews.  Why? Because the interviewer is interested in   your experience, not specifically when things  happened. Let's take a look at a mini clip. This   is an interview with a famous American actress  Jennifer Lawrence. I won't play the whole interview,   but I want you to hear the present perfect.  I'm going to do this quickly so be prepared!   And what have you done for the first time  recently, and what is your favorite movie   of all time, that you never get sick of? I mean,  the movie I've seen the most and watch for any   occasion is Father of the Bride Two. What's  the craziest thing you've ever seen here? Um, the most fun I've ever had with actors on set  is Josh and Liam, Hunger Games. Hi boys! They're   great. All right, let's Golf. We got a mini golf  here. So what's the strangest thing a journalist   has ever asked you in an interview? What's the most  bizarre thing that you've ever read about yourself?   What's the best piece of advice you've  gotten about parenting? Babies don't get   bored. Okie dokie, in all of these examples we  are just interested in the action or experience.   When before now, specifically when? Do. Not. Care.  But earlier in the interview we hear this:   So when was the last time that you played  mini golf? Never or like five years ago. On   Past simple, why? Because  the interviewer is asking when specifically. Okay, so we've looked at single past experiences  or repeated past experiences. But what happens   if the action isn't finished? What happens if the  actions started in the past and is still true now?   We can also use the present perfect.  Jane has lived in Canada for 22 years.   I have had long hair my entire life. They have known each other since kindergarten. For  22 years, my entire life, since kindergarten, all of   these tell us how long. And this is really common  in the present perfect. Is there a connection   between the past and the present? Definitely. Are  the situations still true today? Yes. Common mistake:   Jane is living in Canada for 22 years. Jane  lives in Canada for 22 years. Remember we do   not use the present continuous or the present  simple for that past to present connection. Perfect. I'm going to use the same examples I  used in the present perfect so you can really   see again how similar they are. Past perfect:  An action completed before another past point.   Present perfect: I have been to Paris. When?  Before now. Past perfect: I had been to Paris.   When? Before I started University. You can see  I added the past simple here to make another   past point. The past perfect is always  the action before another past point.   Let's do another example: Present perfect. My  parents have seen my new house. Past perfect.   By the time I moved all of my furniture into  my new house, my parents had already seen it.   Here in this example even though the past perfect  comes second in the sentence, it's still clear   it happened before that past simple action.  Present perfect. He has finished his homework.   Past perfect. Louis' Mom let him play video games  (past simple) because he had finished his homework.   And just like the present perfect, the past  perfect can also show a past to past connection.   The present perfect, remember  a past to present connection?   Past perfect, let's move it back past  to past connection. Jane was sad to move   because she had lived in Canada for 22 years.  Past to past connection. I had had long hair   my entire life and it was really difficult for me  to cut it. Had had? Is that possible? Yes, remember   the past perfect is had plus past participle.  What's the past participle of have? Had, had had. Nathan and Brian decided to open a business  together. They had known each other since   kindergarten and trusted each other. I  want you to take a look at a little clip.   This is a police interrogation. An interrogation is  a police interview. This man is the detective and   this man is who the police think did the crime,  he is the suspect. Police interrogations are a   great place to find the past perfect, because  you need to speak about the past in detail.   Yeah. We didn't even know the first  one had happened but uh, I understand that was   reasonably close as well, but the second one was  uh... We didn't even know the first one had happened.   Here one means a crime, we didn't even know  (past simple) that the first one had happened.   Again, the past perfect describes an  action before another past action.   The first crime happened before they knew  about it. Learned that you told me. Okay. So   I got an email, I can't remember if it was late  at night early in the morning but certainly I   saw it uh... I want to say first thing in the morning,  because I had just come back from Ottawa. I was in   Ottawa for... So he saw the email first thing in  the morning. He had just come back from Ottawa.   Things like fingerprints blood  samples things like that? Yeah. Okay,   um... The only two pieces of evidence that police  had acquired at this point in time were the   tire tracks and the footprints outside the  missing person's residence. At this point   in time, is a pastime. Before this the police had  acquired tire tracks and footprints as evidence. Right, let's compare the past  simple and the past perfect.   Kim had taken the TOEFL exam, Kim took the TOEFL  exam. Jane had lived in Canada for 22 years, Jane   lived in Canada for 22 years. I had had long  hair my entire life, or I had long hair my   entire life. The past perfect actions again are  actions that happened before another past action.   So in these examples here a few things are  missing. In the past perfect column we don't   have that other past action as a reference.  And what am I missing in my past simple column?   The specific time. Hmm... But something doesn't feel  right. I had long hair my entire life? Past simple? Am I still alive? Yes. Would I use past  simple? No, in this case here you do need   to look at the situation. What tense would I  use to describe a past to present connection?   Present perfect. I've had long hair my entire life.  I could say, I mean I could talk about someone else   someone who is no longer alive. Mary Smith had long  hair her entire life, that works. So whenever you   use a tense, you can't only look at the grammar, you  also need to look at the logic of the situation.   It's time for the future perfect, and yep, I'm  going to use the same example so again you can   see how similar they are. You just need to move  the period to the present, the past, or the future. The future perfect, a completed action.  When? Before another Future Point. Everyone has been to more countries than me. You're going on a trip throughout  Europe. By the end of the summer   you will have been to France, Germany,  and Spain. That's more than most people.   What's my future point? By the end of the summer  what will have happened before then? I will have   been to France, Germany, and Spain. Kim is so  stressed about her TOEFL exam, she can't sleep. In a few days she will have  finished her TOEFL exam.   What's my future point? In a few days.  What will have been finished by then?   Kim will have taken her TOEFL exam. I wanted to  surprise my parents by showing them my new house.  But by the time I show them my new house (future  point), they will have already seen it on Instagram.   Okay, let's keep going, and you might know what's  coming next. We can use the future perfect for an   action that continues up to another future point.  Jane has lived in Canada for a very long time.   By 2025 she will have lived in Canada for 22  years. And this action can either start in the past,   the present, or in the future. We don't  really know, it depends on the situation. How long has Dan been your assistant? Let me  see, I hired him on my birthday, so on my next   birthday he will have been with me for eight  years. You can see an action that continued up   to another future point. It's time to compare. Let's  compare the future simple, and the future perfect.   You can see my two columns here:  future perfect and future simple.   The future perfect emphasizes, what doesn't  emphasize? A completed action before another future   point, that's really important. Completed before  a future point or continued up to a future point.   The future simple does not depend on anything in  the future, it's just when something will happen.   Your turn to practice, here is your homework: What  is something you have done that you are proud of?   Past perfect, what is something you had done before  you turned 18? If you're not 18 yet, think of a   different example. Future perfect, what is something  you will have done by the time you turn 100? Use these questions to help you practice,  and think of really personal examples. Perfect tenses review: The perfect tenses  emphasize a completed action before something else   I have taught the present  perfect many times before now.   When I completed my teacher training course,  I had not taught the present perfect at all.   By the time I turn 40, I will have  taught the present perfect many times . The perfect tenses also describe an action that  continues up to another point. Present perfect,   I have been a teacher for 12 years, up to now.  By 2011 I had been a teacher for only one year.   In nine years, I will have been  a teacher for half of my life. Perfect tenses done. Don't forget to check  out my next video on the perfect continuous   tenses. Thank you so much for watching  this lesson, I'll see you next time! Bye!!!