A complete guide to all 12 English tenses plus tense consistency rules — covering structure, usage, time expressions, and common errors tested in competitive exams, entry tests, and job assessments.
A tense is the grammatical form of a verb that tells us when an action takes place — in the present, past, or future — and how it takes place — whether it is simple, ongoing, completed, or completed before another point in time. Mastering tenses is non-negotiable for English grammar exams. Every MCQ paper, entry test, and job assessment includes tense-based questions. English has 12 tenses organized across three time frames: Present, Past, and Future — each with four aspects: Simple, Continuous, Perfect, and Perfect Continuous.
| Time | Simple | Continuous | Perfect | Perfect Continuous |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present | Simple Present | Present Continuous | Present Perfect | Present Perfect Continuous |
| Past | Simple Past | Past Continuous | Past Perfect | Past Perfect Continuous |
| Future | Simple Future | Future Continuous | Future Perfect | Future Perfect Continuous |
Definition
The simple present tense describes actions that are habitual, routine, permanent, or universally true. It is also used for scheduled events and general facts.
Structure
Positive: Subject + base form of verb (+ s/es for third person singular) Negative: Subject + do/does + not + base form Question: Do/Does + subject + base form?
When to Use
Habits and routines: Actions that happen regularly. Example: She drinks tea every morning.
General truths and facts: Things that are always or universally true. Example: The sun rises in the east.
Permanent situations: States that do not change. Example: He lives in Lahore.
Scheduled future events: Official timetables and programs. Example: The train leaves at 6pm.
Newspaper headlines and sports commentary: Describes past events as if happening now. Example: President visits flood-affected areas.
Common Time Expressions
always, usually, often, sometimes, rarely, never, every day, every week, on Mondays, generally, normally, as a rule
Third Person Singular Rules (he/she/it)
Add -s for most verbs: runs, eats, walks, plays Add -es for verbs ending in -s, -sh, -ch, -x, -o: watches, goes, fixes, washes Change -y to -ies when preceded by a consonant: studies, carries, flies Irregular: has (from have), is (from be)
Common Errors
Wrong: She go to school every day. Correct: She goes to school every day.
Wrong: He don't like spicy food. Correct: He doesn't like spicy food.
Exam Tip
The simple present tense is used for scientific facts and universal truths even when the surrounding sentence is in the past. "Scientists discovered that water boils at 100°C" — not "boiled." This rule is heavily tested.
Definition
The present continuous tense describes actions that are happening right now, at the moment of speaking, or actions that are happening around this time but not necessarily at this exact second. It also expresses definite plans for the near future.
Structure
Positive: Subject + is/am/are + verb-ing Negative: Subject + is/am/are + not + verb-ing Question: Is/Am/Are + subject + verb-ing?
When to Use
Actions happening right now: Example: She is reading a novel.
Temporary actions in progress (not necessarily right this second): Example: He is studying for his exams this week.
Changing or developing situations: Example: Prices are rising every month.
Planned future arrangements: Example: We are meeting the director tomorrow.
Annoying habits (with "always" — expresses irritation): Example: He is always losing his keys.
Common Time Expressions
now, right now, at the moment, at present, currently, these days, this week, this year, look! listen!
Stative Verbs — Cannot Use Continuous Form
Certain verbs express a state rather than an action. These verbs are never used in the continuous form.
Thinking/knowing: know, believe, understand, think (opinion), remember, forget, realize, mean Feeling/wanting: want, need, prefer, love, hate, like, dislike, wish Senses: see, hear, smell, taste, feel (involuntary) Possession: have (own), own, possess, belong Others: seem, appear, contain, consist, include, matter
Wrong: I am knowing the answer. Correct: I know the answer.
Wrong: She is wanting a new job. Correct: She wants a new job.
Exam Tip
Stative verbs are among the most frequently tested grammar points. If you see a verb like "know," "believe," "understand," "own," or "want" in a continuous form, it is almost certainly wrong. Memorize the list of stative verbs thoroughly.
Definition
The present perfect tense connects the past to the present. It describes actions that happened at an unspecified time in the past but have a result or relevance in the present, or actions that started in the past and continue up to now.
Structure
Positive: Subject + has/have + past participle Negative: Subject + has/have + not + past participle Question: Has/Have + subject + past participle?
When to Use
Experience — something done at some point in life (exact time unknown or unimportant): Example: I have visited Dubai. (at some point in my life)
Recent actions with present results: Example: She has broken her arm. (her arm is still broken now)
Actions that started in the past and continue to the present (with since/for): Example: He has lived here for ten years. (he still lives here)
News and announcements of recent events: Example: Scientists have discovered a new vaccine.
Incomplete time periods (this week, today, this year): Example: I have written three reports today. (today is not yet over)
Common Time Expressions
just, already, yet, ever, never, recently, lately, since (specific point), for (duration), so far, up to now, this week, this month, this year
Since vs. For
Since — used with a specific point in time (when the action started): Examples: since 2010, since Monday, since morning, since childhood, since I was a child
For — used with a duration of time (how long the action has lasted): Examples: for ten years, for three hours, for a long time, for ages, for two days
Wrong: I have lived here since ten years. Correct: I have lived here for ten years.
Wrong: I have lived here for 2010. Correct: I have lived here since 2010.
Present Perfect vs. Simple Past
Use simple past when the time of the action is specified or the time period is complete. Use present perfect when the time is unspecified or the time period is still ongoing.
Wrong: I have seen him yesterday. Correct: I saw him yesterday. (yesterday = specific, completed time)
Wrong: She finished her assignment already. Correct: She has already finished her assignment. (result relevant now)
Exam Tip
"Yet" is used in negatives and questions: Have you finished yet? / I haven't finished yet. "Already" is used in positives and questions showing surprise: I have already finished. / Have you already finished? Mixing these up is a very common error.
Definition
The present perfect continuous tense emphasizes the duration of an activity that started in the past and is still continuing at the present moment, or has only just stopped. It focuses on the ongoing process rather than the result.
Structure
Positive: Subject + has/have + been + verb-ing Negative: Subject + has/have + not + been + verb-ing Question: Has/Have + subject + been + verb-ing?
When to Use
Actions that started in the past and are still continuing: Example: She has been working here since 2018. (she still works here)
Actions that recently stopped but whose effects are still visible: Example: He has been crying. (his eyes are still red)
To emphasize how long something has been happening: Example: They have been waiting for three hours.
Common Time Expressions
for, since, all day, all morning, how long, lately, recently
Present Perfect vs. Present Perfect Continuous
Present Perfect — focuses on the result or completion of an action: I have written the report. (the report is done — result matters)
Present Perfect Continuous — focuses on the duration and ongoing process: I have been writing the report. (emphasizes how long I have been working on it)
Common Errors
Wrong: I am working here since five years. Correct: I have been working here for five years.
Wrong: She has been knowing him for years. Correct: She has known him for years. (know is a stative verb — no continuous form)
Exam Tip
With stative verbs (know, like, love, own, believe, understand), use the present perfect rather than the present perfect continuous even when emphasizing duration. "I have known her for years" — not "I have been knowing her."
Definition
The simple past tense describes actions that started and finished at a specific time in the past. The time may be stated or clearly implied. It is the most commonly used past tense in English.
Structure
Positive: Subject + past form of verb (verb-ed for regular verbs) Negative: Subject + did + not + base form Question: Did + subject + base form?
When to Use
Completed actions at a definite time in the past: Example: She submitted the report yesterday.
A series of completed past actions: Example: He woke up, got dressed, and left the house.
Past habits or states that no longer exist: Example: They lived in Karachi for twenty years. (but no longer do)
Historical facts: Example: Pakistan gained independence in 1947.
Common Time Expressions
yesterday, last week, last year, last night, ago (two days ago, a year ago), in 2010, in the morning, then, when, at that time, once, formerly
Regular and Irregular Verbs
Regular verbs add -ed: walk → walked, play → played, study → studied, stop → stopped
Common irregular verbs (frequently tested):
| Base | Past |
|---|---|
| go | went |
| come | came |
| see | saw |
| give | gave |
| take | took |
| make | made |
| write | wrote |
| begin | began |
| speak | spoke |
| buy | bought |
| bring | brought |
| think | thought |
| catch | caught |
| teach | taught |
| know | knew |
| grow | grew |
| throw | threw |
| fly | flew |
| run | ran |
| sit | sat |
Common Errors
Wrong: She didn't went to the market. Correct: She didn't go to the market. (did + base form, not past form)
Wrong: He has submitted the form yesterday. Correct: He submitted the form yesterday. (specific time = simple past, not present perfect)
Exam Tip
After "did" in negatives and questions, always use the base form of the verb, never the past form. "Did she went?" is always wrong. "Did she go?" is correct. This is one of the most tested error types in grammar MCQs.
Definition
The past continuous tense describes an action that was in progress at a specific moment in the past or was ongoing when another action interrupted it. It emphasizes the duration or background of a past event.
Structure
Positive: Subject + was/were + verb-ing Negative: Subject + was/were + not + verb-ing Question: Was/Were + subject + verb-ing?
When to Use
An action in progress at a specific time in the past: Example: At 8pm last night, she was studying.
A longer background action interrupted by a shorter action (use "when"): Example: I was cooking dinner when the phone rang. (was cooking = ongoing background action; rang = sudden interruption)
Two actions happening simultaneously in the past (use "while"): Example: While she was reading, he was writing.
Repeated past actions that were annoying (with "always"): Example: He was always making excuses.
Setting the scene in a story or narrative: Example: The sun was setting, birds were singing, and people were walking in the park.
Common Time Expressions
while, when, at that moment, at 8 o'clock last night, all morning, all day, as, just as, at the time
When vs. While
When — used with the shorter, completed interrupting action (simple past): I was sleeping when he called.
While — used with the longer, ongoing background action (past continuous): While I was sleeping, he called.
Common Errors
Wrong: I was study when she arrived. Correct: I was studying when she arrived.
Wrong: While he cooked, she was washing dishes. Correct: While he was cooking, she was washing dishes. (both actions ongoing = both continuous)
Exam Tip
In sentences with "when" and "while," identify which action is the longer background action and which is the shorter interruption. The longer action takes the past continuous; the shorter interruption takes the simple past. This pattern is tested repeatedly.
Definition
The past perfect tense describes an action that was completed before another action or time in the past. It is the "past of the past." When two past actions are mentioned, the one that happened first uses the past perfect; the one that happened second uses the simple past.
Structure
Positive: Subject + had + past participle Negative: Subject + had + not + past participle Question: Had + subject + past participle?
When to Use
An action completed before another past action: Example: By the time she arrived, the meeting had already started. (The meeting started first → past perfect. She arrived second → simple past.)
An action completed before a specific past time: Example: By 10pm, he had finished all his work.
Reporting what someone said (indirect speech — past in the past): Example: She said that she had submitted the application.
Expressing an unfulfilled condition in the past (third conditional): Example: If he had studied harder, he would have passed.
Common Time Expressions
by the time, before, after, already, just, when, as soon as, no sooner … than, hardly … when, scarcely … when
No Sooner … Than / Hardly … When
These expressions require the past perfect in the first clause: No sooner had he left than it started raining. Hardly had she sat down when the bell rang. Scarcely had I closed my eyes when I heard a noise.
Note: These structures are inverted — the auxiliary "had" comes before the subject.
Common Errors
Wrong: When I reached the station, the train already left. Correct: When I reached the station, the train had already left. (left first → past perfect)
Wrong: She had gone to the market before he came. Correct: She went to the market before he had come. — Better: She had gone to the market before he came.
Exam Tip
When two past events are mentioned, use the past perfect for the earlier one and simple past for the later one. The words "before" and "after" logically indicate which event came first, so strictly speaking the past perfect is necessary only when the sequence would otherwise be unclear. However, exam questions almost always require the past perfect with "by the time," "no sooner … than," and "hardly … when."
Definition
The past perfect continuous tense emphasizes the duration of an action that was ongoing up to a specific point in the past, or until another past action occurred. It combines the idea of "before a past moment" with "ongoing duration."
Structure
Positive: Subject + had + been + verb-ing Negative: Subject + had + not + been + verb-ing Question: Had + subject + been + verb-ing?
When to Use
An action that had been going on for some time before another past action: Example: She had been waiting for two hours when he finally arrived.
Explaining the cause of a past condition — the ongoing cause of a visible past result: Example: His clothes were muddy because he had been playing football.
An action that was ongoing up to a specific point in the past: Example: By 2020, they had been working on the project for five years.
Common Time Expressions
for, since, all day, all morning, when, by the time, before, how long
Past Perfect vs. Past Perfect Continuous
Past Perfect — focuses on completion before a past point: She had written the report before the meeting. (report was finished)
Past Perfect Continuous — focuses on ongoing duration before a past point: She had been writing the report for hours before the meeting. (emphasizes the process)
Common Errors
Wrong: He was tired because he worked all day. Correct: He was tired because he had been working all day. (ongoing action caused the past result)
Wrong: They had been knew each other for years before they married. Correct: They had known each other for years before they married. (know is stative — no continuous)
Exam Tip
This tense is used to explain the background cause of a past state. If a sentence says someone was tired, injured, or out of breath in the past, the reason often requires the past perfect continuous: "He was exhausted because he had been running."
Definition
The simple future tense describes actions that will happen in the future. English expresses future time in several ways — the most common are using will and be going to, each with distinct uses.
Structure
With will: Positive: Subject + will + base form Negative: Subject + will + not (won't) + base form Question: Will + subject + base form?
With be going to: Positive: Subject + is/am/are + going to + base form Negative: Subject + is/am/are + not + going to + base form Question: Is/Am/Are + subject + going to + base form?
Will vs. Be Going To
Use will for: Spontaneous decisions made at the moment of speaking: Hold on — I'll answer that for you.
Predictions based on opinion or belief (no evidence): I think she will win the election.
Promises, offers, requests, threats: I will help you with your homework. Will you please close the door?
Use be going to for: Plans and intentions decided before the moment of speaking: I am going to apply for a new job next month. (already planned)
Predictions based on present evidence: Look at those clouds — it is going to rain. (evidence visible now)
Common Time Expressions
tomorrow, next week, next year, soon, in the future, in a few minutes, later, eventually, one day, by next year
Other Ways to Express Future
Present continuous — fixed personal arrangements: We are meeting the client on Thursday.
Simple present — timetabled or scheduled events: The exam starts at 9am.
Be about to — something happening very soon: The president is about to give a speech.
Common Errors
Wrong: If it will rain, we will cancel the trip. Correct: If it rains, we will cancel the trip. (future condition: use simple present in the if-clause, will in the main clause)
Wrong: She is going to will travel abroad. Correct: She is going to travel abroad. (never use will and going to together)
Exam Tip
In conditional sentences, time clauses, and clauses beginning with if, when, before, after, unless, until, as soon as — never use will. Use the simple present instead. "When she arrives, I will call you." This rule is one of the most tested in grammar exams.
Definition
The future continuous tense describes an action that will be in progress at a specific time in the future, or an action that will be ongoing during a future period.
Structure
Positive: Subject + will + be + verb-ing Negative: Subject + will + not + be + verb-ing Question: Will + subject + be + verb-ing?
When to Use
An action in progress at a specific future time: Example: At 9am tomorrow, I will be sitting in my exam.
An action that will be ongoing during a future period: Example: This time next week, she will be traveling to London.
Politely asking about someone's plans (without suggesting interference): Example: Will you be using the car tonight?
Predicting an ongoing action in the near future: Example: Don't call at noon — she will be having her lunch.
Common Time Expressions
at this time tomorrow, this time next week, in the middle of, all day tomorrow, at 5pm, while, when
Common Errors
Wrong: Tomorrow at noon, I will sit in a meeting. Correct: Tomorrow at noon, I will be sitting in a meeting. (ongoing at a future point)
Wrong: She will be finish the project by then. Correct: She will have finished the project by then. (completed before a future point = future perfect)
Exam Tip
The key signal for the future continuous is a specific future time + an action that will be in progress at that time. "At 10pm tonight" + ongoing action → future continuous. "By 10pm tonight" + completed action → future perfect.
Definition
The future perfect tense describes an action that will be completed before a specific time or another action in the future. It looks back from a future point to a completed event.
Structure
Positive: Subject + will + have + past participle Negative: Subject + will + not + have + past participle Question: Will + subject + have + past participle?
When to Use
An action that will be completed before a specific future time: Example: By next month, she will have finished her thesis.
An action that will be completed before another future action: Example: The guests will have arrived before we return home.
Expressing confidence that something will be done by a deadline: Example: Don't worry — I will have submitted the report by Friday.
Common Time Expressions
by tomorrow, by next week, by the end of the year, by the time, before, by then, by 2030
Future Perfect vs. Future Continuous
Future Perfect — action completed before a future point: By 6pm, I will have finished the work. (work done before 6pm)
Future Continuous — action in progress at a future point: At 6pm, I will be finishing the work. (work ongoing at 6pm)
Common Errors
Wrong: By the time you arrive, I finish cooking. Correct: By the time you arrive, I will have finished cooking.
Wrong: She will have been complete the course by June. Correct: She will have completed the course by June. (will + have + past participle — not past continuous)
Exam Tip
The word "by" is the strongest signal for the future perfect tense. Whenever you see "by + future time" with a completed action, use "will have + past participle." This is the most reliable and tested rule for this tense.
Definition
The future perfect continuous tense describes an action that will have been ongoing for a period of time up to a specific point in the future. It emphasizes the duration of a future activity up to a future moment.
Structure
Positive: Subject + will + have + been + verb-ing Negative: Subject + will + not + have + been + verb-ing Question: Will + subject + have + been + verb-ing?
When to Use
Emphasizing how long an action will have been going on by a future time: Example: By December, she will have been working here for ten years.
An action ongoing up to a future point, whose effects will still be visible: Example: When the doctor sees him, he will have been running for two hours.
Highlighting the continuous effort behind a future result: Example: By the time they finish, they will have been building that bridge for six years.
Common Time Expressions
by, for, when, by the time, how long, by then + a duration
Future Perfect vs. Future Perfect Continuous
Future Perfect — focuses on completion: By June, she will have written the book. (book will be done)
Future Perfect Continuous — focuses on duration of ongoing process: By June, she will have been writing the book for eight months. (how long she will have been at it)
Common Errors
Wrong: By next year, I will be working here for five years. Correct: By next year, I will have been working here for five years.
Wrong: She will have been known him for a decade by then. Correct: She will have known him for a decade by then. (know is stative — no continuous)
Exam Tip
This is the most complex tense and is rarely used in casual speech, but it does appear in advanced grammar tests. The key signals are "by" + future time + "for" + duration. Stative verbs cannot be used in this tense — use the future perfect instead.
Definition
Tense consistency means using the same tense throughout a sentence or passage when describing actions that occur in the same time frame. Unnecessarily shifting from one tense to another within a single sentence or paragraph is called an unnecessary tense shift — and it is a grammatical error.
The Core Rule
When two or more actions happen at the same time or in the same time frame, they must be in the same tense. Do not mix past and present, or present and future, without a logical reason.
Logical vs. Illogical Tense Shifts
An illogical tense shift changes tense without any change in time frame: Wrong: She walked into the room and sits down. Correct: She walked into the room and sat down.
A logical tense shift changes tense because the time frame genuinely changes: Correct: He said that he is a doctor. (general truth — present tense is acceptable) Correct: I studied hard, so I will pass the exam. (past action + future result)
Rules for Tense Consistency
Rule 1 — Sequence of actions in the same time frame All verbs describing sequential actions in the same story or account must remain in the same tense.
Wrong: He entered the hall, looks around, and found a seat. Correct: He entered the hall, looked around, and found a seat.
Rule 2 — Reported speech and backshifting When the reporting verb is in the past, the tense of the reported clause is generally shifted one step back into the past.
Direct: She said, "I am tired." Indirect: She said that she was tired.
Direct: He said, "I have finished the work." Indirect: He said that he had finished the work.
Direct: She said, "I will come tomorrow." Indirect: She said that she would come the next day.
Backshifting chart for indirect speech:
| Direct Speech Tense | Indirect Speech Tense |
|---|---|
| Simple present | Simple past |
| Present continuous | Past continuous |
| Present perfect | Past perfect |
| Simple past | Past perfect |
| Will | Would |
| Can | Could |
| May | Might |
| Must | Had to |
Rule 3 — General truths and facts do not backshift If the reported clause contains a universal truth or scientific fact, the present tense is retained even when the reporting verb is past.
Correct: The teacher said that the earth revolves around the sun. Correct: Scientists proved that light travels faster than sound.
Rule 4 — Conditional sentences — fixed tense patterns
| Conditional Type | If-clause | Main clause |
|---|---|---|
| Zero (universal truth) | Simple present | Simple present |
| First (real future) | Simple present | Will + base form |
| Second (unreal present) | Simple past | Would + base form |
| Third (unreal past) | Past perfect | Would + have + past participle |
| Mixed | Past perfect | Would + base form |
Examples: If you heat water to 100°C, it boils. (zero conditional) If she studies hard, she will pass. (first conditional) If I had more time, I would learn a new skill. (second conditional) If he had applied, he would have got the job. (third conditional)
Rule 5 — Narrative present (historical present) In literary analysis, creative writing, and journalism, writers sometimes use the present tense to describe past events to make them feel immediate and vivid. This is acceptable if done consistently throughout the passage.
Acceptable: Napoleon marches his army into Russia. He expects an easy victory. The winter, however, has other plans.
Wrong: Napoleon marched his army into Russia. He expects an easy victory. (inconsistent mid-narrative shift)
Most Commonly Tested Tense Consistency Errors
Unnecessary shift from past to present: Wrong: The politician gave a speech and then takes questions from the crowd. Correct: The politician gave a speech and then took questions from the crowd.
Unnecessary shift from present to past: Wrong: She always arrives early and prepared all her materials in advance. Correct: She always arrives early and prepares all her materials in advance.
Mixing real and unreal conditionals: Wrong: If she would study harder, she will pass. Correct: If she studies harder, she will pass. (first conditional — real possibility) Or: If she studied harder, she would pass. (second conditional — unreal/hypothetical)
Using past tense after "would rather" and "it is time": Correct: I would rather she stayed home. (not "stays") Correct: It is time he went to sleep. (not "goes") — subjunctive mood
Exam Tip
In error-spotting and sentence correction questions, always check whether all verbs in a sentence share the same time frame. Look especially for sentences where one verb is clearly past and another is present with no logical reason for the switch. Also memorize the conditional tense patterns — these appear in almost every competitive exam.
| Tense | Structure | Key Use | Signal Words |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simple Present | V / V+s | Habits, facts, routines | always, usually, every day |
| Present Continuous | is/am/are + V-ing | Action happening now | now, at the moment, currently |
| Present Perfect | has/have + V3 | Past experience, recent result | just, already, yet, since, for |
| Present Perfect Continuous | has/have + been + V-ing | Ongoing duration up to now | for, since, how long, lately |
| Simple Past | V2 | Completed past action | yesterday, ago, last year, in 2010 |
| Past Continuous | was/were + V-ing | Ongoing past action or interruption | while, when, at that time |
| Past Perfect | had + V3 | Earlier of two past actions | before, by the time, already, when |
| Past Perfect Continuous | had + been + V-ing | Ongoing duration before a past point | for, since, all day, when, before |
| Simple Future | will + V | Spontaneous decision, prediction, promise | tomorrow, soon, next year |
| Future Continuous | will + be + V-ing | Action in progress at a future point | at this time tomorrow, while |
| Future Perfect | will + have + V3 | Action completed before a future point | by, by the time, before |
| Future Perfect Continuous | will + have + been + V-ing | Ongoing duration up to a future point | by … for, by the time |