Present perfect has two uses: finished past actions and continuing actions. Simple past uses verb + -ed, present perfect uses have/has + past participle. Time markers show whether action is finished or continuing
Present perfect uses "have/has + past participle" or "have/has + been + -ing". Simple form focuses on present results, continuous form emphasizes actions
Exercise 1 tests state vs action relationships. Exercise 2 compares quantity vs length. Exercise 3 focuses on finished vs unfinished actions. Exercise 4 examines evidence for longer actions. Exercise 5 combines both perfect tenses
Test includes 10 practice questions with verb placement. Signal words test correctness in sentences. Questions test tense usage with various actions
Exercise 1 tests past, present perfect and past perfect tenses. 30 points for correct tense selection. Examples include "have/has walked", "was/was cleaning", "has sprained"
Page offers 100+ present perfect conversation questions for English learners. Questions can be practiced individually or with partners. Warm-up questions suitable for intermediate level learners. Most "Let's go!" questions require intermediate to advanced level