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When is past perfect tense helpful?

Use the Past Perfect tense to talk about multiple things that have already happened.

 

Several tenses, or verb forms, are used in the English language to describe when something occurred. The simple tenses include:  

Present: I am studying for an exam. (when something is happening) 

Past: I studied for an exam. (when something happened) 

Future: I will study for an exam. (when something will happen) 

 

The simple past tense allows us to describe something that occurred in the past. What happens when we need to talk about multiple things that occurred in the past? Let’s say, we want to talk about these two things: 

  • We arrived at the theater at noon.  

  • The movie started at 11 a.m. 

 

To discuss both events and distinguish their order, we can use the past perfect

The past perfect features had + the past participle verb. For example: 

  • When we arrived at the theater, the movie had started.  

 

Most past participle forms are simply had + the simple past tense verb.

Present Past Past Perfect
start started had started
jump jumped had jumped
look looked had looked
walk walked had walked
study studied had studied

However, some verbs have irregular forms. For example:  

Present Past Past Perfect
see saw had seen
write wrote had written
swim swam had swum
begin began had begun
grow grew had grown
lie lay had lain

Remember to use the past participle form, rather than the simple past tense verb form, when utilizing the past perfect tense. With the past perfect tense, you can clarify the order of multiple events that happened in the past. Correctly using this tense will make your writing easier to read and understand. 

 

Tyrone, the RVC Writing Center mascot, has an idea

Source consulted: Upswing Writing Lab 

Guide created by: C. Jones 3/29/2021  

Revised by: B. McCoid 1/19/2024

 

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