Some Mistakes in The Use of Tenses
Some Mistakes in The Use of Tenses
Some Mistakes in The Use of Tenses
ESL students often find it difficult to use tenses correctly. The present perfect and past perfect
tenses are particularly confusing.
In this article we will take a look at some of the most common mistakes in the use of tenses.
Explanation
The present perfect tense is not used with adverbs of past time. Although past perfect tense
can be used with adverbs of past time, it is not used to simply say that something happened some
time ago. That meaning is expressed with the simple past tense.
I sent the money yesterday. (NOT I had sent the money yesterday. / NOT I have sent the
money yesterday.)
I finished that report last week. (NOT I had finished that report last week. / NOT I have
finished that report last week.)
I visited my parents last week. (NOT I had visited my parents last week. / NOT I have
visited my parents last week.)
The past perfect tense is only used to talk about the earlier of two past actions.
Using would
Would is used in second conditional sentences to talk about unreal or imaginary situations.
Compare:
I would want to buy a car if I got my raise. (Here we are talking about an unreal
situation.)
I want to buy a car. (Here we are simply talking about a desire.)
I would want to try those sweets if they weren’t so expensive.
Sentences like ‘I would want to buy a car’ are not normally used without a condition.
Incorrect: He said that he was suffering from fever for three days.
Correct: He said that he had been suffering from fever for three days.
Correct: The man complained that his watch had been stolen.
Incorrect: The doctor concluded that the man died twelve hours ago.
Correct: The doctor concluded that the man had died twelve hours ago.
Here the error lies in using the simple past instead of the past perfect or the past continuous
instead of the past perfect continuous.
The past perfect denotes an action completed at some point in the past before some other past
action commenced. When two actions in the past have to be referred to, the past perfect should
be used for the earlier action, and the simple past for the later one.
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