In English, there are three primary tenses: past, present, and future. These tenses can be further divided into four aspects: simple, continuous, perfect, and perfect continuous. Let’s explore these tenses one by one. Here are 12 basic types of tenses: 1. Simple Present Tense.
In English, there are 12 verb tenses. These tenses help us express not only the time of an action (past, present, or future) but also its state (whether it’s ongoing, completed, or repeated).
A tenses chart puts present, past, and future in one table and links each tense to its sentence pattern, its key helping verbs, and a short example. It also keeps statements, negatives, and questions close together, so you can build the form you need without guessing.
Let us study all the twelve types of tenses in detail, #1. Present Tenses: A present tense describes any action that is commonly performed or is happening in a current situation. Simple present tense speaks about the present actions, events, or conditions which are occurring in the current situation. Subject + verb (s/es) + object.
The standard tense in English is the present tense, which is usually just the root form of the verb. The past and future tenses often require changes or additions to the root form, such as the suffix –ed for the past tense and the modal verb will for the future.
Verb tense is determined by when the action took place. The three main tenses are the past tense, the present tense, and the future tense. Verb tense also tells whether the action is habitual, ongoing, or completed.