English Tenses: All 12 Tenses Explained with Examples
A complete reference for all 12 English tenses - which ones matter most, the confused pairs that cause the most errors, and specific guidance for Arabic and French speakers.
Updated September 2026 | 14 min read | Direct English Live
The 12 Tenses at a Glance
English tenses combine three time references (present, past, future) with four aspects (simple, continuous, perfect, perfect continuous). The result is 12 tense forms. Not all of them are equally important - focus on high-frequency tenses first.
Tense
Form
Example
Priority
Present Simple
verb / verb+s
I work / She works
High
Present Continuous
am/is/are + -ing
I am working
High
Past Simple
verb+ed / irregular
I worked / I went
High
Present Perfect
have/has + past participle
I have worked
High
Future (will)
will + infinitive
I will work
High
Future (going to)
am/is/are going to + infinitive
I am going to work
High
Past Continuous
was/were + -ing
I was working
Medium
Past Perfect
had + past participle
I had worked
Medium
Present Perfect Continuous
have/has been + -ing
I have been working
Medium
Future Continuous
will be + -ing
I will be working
Lower
Future Perfect
will have + past participle
I will have worked
Lower
Future Perfect Continuous
will have been + -ing
I will have been working
Lower
Present Tenses
Present Simple I work / She works
Use for: habits and routines, facts and permanent states, schedules, general truths
"I start work at 8am." / "Water boils at 100 degrees." / "The train leaves at 9."
Present Continuous I am working
Use for: actions happening right now, temporary situations, arranged future plans
"I am working on the report now." / "She is staying with a colleague this week." / "We are meeting at 3pm tomorrow."
Present Simple vs Present Continuous: the key distinction
I work in marketing. (permanent job - present simple) I am working on a new campaign. (current project - present continuous)
I am working in marketing. (implies temporary - usually wrong for a permanent role)
Past Tenses
Past Simple I worked / I went
Use for: completed actions in the past, especially with a specific time reference
"I sent the email yesterday." / "She joined the company in 2019." / "We finished the project last week."
Present Perfect I have worked / She has gone
Use for: past actions with present relevance; experience at unspecified time; actions in an unfinished period
"I have sent the email." (it is ready, result matters now) / "Have you ever been to London?" / "I have worked here for three years." (still working)
The most important distinction in English tenses: Past simple vs present perfect. The deciding factor is whether the time is finished. "I worked there in 2020" - 2020 is finished. "I have worked there for six years" - the period continues now. Never use present perfect with a specific finished time: "I have sent it yesterday" is always wrong.
Past Continuous I was working
Use for: background action interrupted by a past simple event; parallel past actions
"I was preparing the report when the power cut happened." / "While she was presenting, he was taking notes."
Past Perfect I had worked / She had left
Use for: an action completed before another past action
"By the time I arrived, the meeting had already started." / "She had reviewed the document before submitting it."
Future Forms
Will + infinitive I will call
Use for: decisions made at the moment of speaking, promises, offers, predictions based on opinion
"I'll help you with that." (decided now) / "I think it will rain tomorrow." (opinion-based prediction)
Going to + infinitive I am going to call
Use for: plans decided before the moment of speaking, predictions based on present evidence
"I am going to present the results next week." (already planned) / "Look at those clouds - it is going to rain." (evidence visible)
Tense Errors by First Language
Error
Arabic speaker pattern
French speaker pattern
Correction
Present perfect vs past simple
Uses present simple for recent past: "I finish the report just now"
Uses present perfect for all past events including finished times: "I have sent it yesterday"
Finished time = past simple; unfinished relevance = present perfect
Present simple vs continuous
Uses present simple for temporary states: "I work on a project this week"
Less common; French has similar distinction
Temporary situations use present continuous
Future forms
Overuses will for all future; misses going to for plans
Translates directly from futur simple - tends toward will for everything
Pre-existing plans use going to; spontaneous decisions use will
Practise Tenses in Real Conversations
Knowing the rules is only the first step. Automatic, correct tense use under conversation pressure comes from speaking practice with correction. Direct English Live lessons focus on exactly this.
English has 12 tenses formed by combining 3 time frames with 4 aspects. However, only 6 are used with high frequency in everyday communication: present simple, present continuous, past simple, present perfect, past continuous, and going to/will future.
Past simple is for actions completely finished, usually with a specific time reference: "I finished the report yesterday." Present perfect is for past actions with a connection to the present: "I have finished the report" (it is ready now). Never use present perfect with a specific finished time like "yesterday" or "last week".
In French, the passé composé covers both functions. French speakers tend to use the present perfect for all past events. The solution is to check the time reference: if a specific finished time is mentioned or implied, always use past simple in English.
'Will' is for decisions made at the moment of speaking and predictions based on opinion. 'Going to' is for plans already decided before speaking, and predictions based on visible evidence. "I'll help you" (decided now) vs "I'm going to present next week" (already planned).
At B1 level, prioritise: present simple vs present continuous, past simple vs present perfect, and going to vs will. These three contrasts cover the most frequent tense errors at this level and have the highest impact on communication clarity.
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