Form
Use
In British English, the use of Simple Past and
Present Perfect is quite strict. As soon as a time expression in the past is
given, you have to use Simple Past. If there are no signal words, you must
decide if we just talk about an action in the past or if its consequence in the
present is important.
Note that the following explanations and
exercises refer to British English only. In American English,
you can normally use Simple Past instead of Present Perfect. We cannot accept
this in our exercises, however, as this would lead to confusions amongst those
who have to learn the differences.
Certain time in the past or just / already / yet?
Do you want to express that an action happened at
a certain time in the past (even if it was just a few seconds ago) or that an
action has just / already / not yet happened?
Certain event in the past or how often so far?
Do you want to express when a certain action took
place or whether / how often an action has happened till now?
Emphasis on action or result?
Do you just want to express what happened in the
past? Or do you want to emphasise the result (a past action's consequence in
the present)?
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