English, asked by alanjoshan, 18 days ago

can anyone explain to me about the present and past perfect tense,present perfect continous tense and future tense

Answers

Answered by thesandhyapaliwal
2

Answer:

Unlike the present perfect continuous, which indicates an action that began in the past and continued up to the present, the past perfect continuous is a verb tense that indicates something that began in the past, continued in the past, and also ended at a defined point in the past.

The future tense is a verb tense used for a future activity or a future state of being. For example: I will jump in the lake. (This is a future activity.) I will be happy.

The two most commonly used auxiliary words for the future tense are “will” or “shall,” and “is going to.” In fact, “shall” is rarely (not often) used these days, because it sounds a little formal. You only need to remember “will.” Either word is followed by the unchanged form of the verb.

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