How to use the PAST PERFECT TENSE...today!

94,959 views ・ 2024-06-22

Learn English with Rebecca


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00:00
Hi. In this lesson, I'm going to show you how you can start using one of the advanced
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00:06
tenses right away, and that is the past perfect
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tense. Now, there are many ways to master
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the tenses. In English, we have 12 different
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tenses, and I have a special program, special
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course with lots of videos on each and every
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one of these tenses, which you should definitely
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watch if you haven't had a chance to see it already. And I have one on the past perfect
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tense as well, a complete lesson. I will send...
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Give you the links, okay, to those... Those
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courses. But what we're going to do today will allow you to jump in and start using
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the tense right away, because there are two
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ways to improve your English. One is, of course,
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to study the grammar and so on, and understand
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the structure, and when to use it, and what
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to do. And the other is just jump in, try to
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understand what's being said, and you might
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just get it right away. And I think that in this case, that's what will happen for you.
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So, let's look at how to use this past perfect tense.
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So, let's just start with a little intro to show you a timeline here. In this timeline,
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we see this is now, everything before this is the past, and everything after this is
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the future. In the past, we can use the past
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simple to talk about anything that happened
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before now, but if we want to talk about more
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than one thing that happened in the past,
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then we use the past perfect to show that
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in the past, a few things happened, but this
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happened first in the past, and then something
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else happened, okay? That's the only theory
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you're going to get. Let's look at the examples
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so I think you will understand very clearly.
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The first one, I had planned to call you, but my phone died. Now, in this example, I
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had planned is what? This is the past perfect,
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that was what I had decided earlier, that
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is what I had planned, but then my phone died,
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just past simple. So, in this particular structure
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that I'm showing you today, with all of the examples, you're going to see that somebody
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had a plan, but then life happened, and something,
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there was another result, and I'm sure that
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all of us can apply this situation and this context to our lives. Let's look at another
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example. I had hoped to meet John, but he
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left early. So, where's the past perfect here?
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Here, I had hoped, right? I had hoped to meet
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John, but he left early. Left is the past
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simple. So, in this kind of construction,
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we're using past perfect and then past simple,
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okay? Next, I had wanted to study tonight, but I was too tired, okay? Not a good idea
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if that happens too often, but it happens once
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in a while to all of us. So, what happened
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here? This person said, "I had wanted", right,
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past perfect, "to study tonight, but I was",
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right, past simple, "too tired". Alright? So, you see here, had planned, had hoped,
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had wanted, all of these are the past perfect.
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Yes, it's an advanced tense, but if you understand
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in what context we use it or why we use it, then it'll make more sense to you to want
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to use it and to be able to use it, right? But first, we have to understand why do we
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even have this? Well, it's to show that you had two things happen. One happened first
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and then another one happened, and all of them happened in the past.
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Let's look at some other verbs that we could
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use in the same way. I had decided to arrive
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home early, but there was a lot of traffic. Or, I had expected to receive their reply,
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but it didn't arrive. Or, he had promised
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to help me, but he had to work late. Or, she
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had offered to join me at the party, but she was out of town. Okay? So, the way that
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you could practice this is think about some situations in your own life, alright? Say
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what, maybe there was something that you had
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decided, but, alright? It doesn't always have
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to be used this way, but this is definitely one kind of sentence structure that we can
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use for that purpose, alright? So, here, we saw this pattern. We saw the past perfect
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tense with an infinitive, right? I had planned
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to call. I had hoped to meet. Infinitive means
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when we say to call, to meet. I had wanted to
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study. That is one way, and next, I'm going
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to show you another little way in which you can use the same pattern to help you start
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using the past perfect tense.
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Now, we'll see similar examples, except this
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time, after the past perfect, we don't need
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to have an infinitive, but we are using nouns.
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So, let's look at an example. We had ordered
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a large pizza, but they sent a small one. Oh no, what are we going to do? So, we had
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ordered is our past perfect, right? Sent is the
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past simple, but here, we see we had ordered
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a pizza, right? We don't need to say, use the
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infinitive after that for any reason because
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it wasn't necessary in this context, okay?
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Next, he had made an appointment, but it was
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postponed, alright? So, again, here, we have
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our past perfect and the past simple. He had
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made. Made what? An appointment. So, we just
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have a noun after that, and that's perfectly fine as well, okay?
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Next, she had requested a window seat, but none
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were available. So, again, she had requested
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what? A window seat, a noun, right? But none
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were available, alright? So, I hope you see
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that this past perfect tense, which is, as I said, an advanced tense, can nevertheless
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be very useful to talk about everyday life, to talk about different situations in your
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personal life, in your professional life, in your academic life, or anything else.
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The best way that you can really adopt this
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and start using it yourself is to write some
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examples for yourself about your life. Is there something that you had planned to do,
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but something happened? Is there something that you had hoped to do, or see, or watch,
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or read, or whatever, and something happened, and so on and so forth, okay?
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So, by writing those kind of examples about yourself, this will become a part of you,
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and it will become a more natural part of
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the way in which you communicate in English.
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And of course, check out the course, okay?
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If you want the full explanation of this past
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perfect tense, I have an entire video class
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on this tense, as well as classes and videos
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on every single one of the English verb tenses.
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So, check those out, go to www.engvid.com,
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do some more practice. You can definitely move forward in English every single day.
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Take care. Bye for now.
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