Course Content
Unit 1: Talking About the Past
Present Perfect vs Simple Past — learn when to use each one in real conversation.
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Grammar for Real Communication

The big idea

Think of it like a camera lens. 🎥

Present Perfect = wide-angle. You’re looking at your whole life — no specific time, just “somewhere in all those years.”

Simple Past = zoom lens. You’re looking at one specific moment. When? Where? You can see it clearly.

A: “Have you ever tried sushi? — wide angle. Asking about your whole life up to now.

B: “Yes, I tried it last summer. — zoom. A specific moment just came into focus.

Same experience. Different lens. That’s the whole difference.

 

The switch moment

In real conversations, you often start with the Present Perfect and switch to Simple Past the moment a specific time appears:

A: “Have you ever been to Japan?”

B: “Yes! I’ve been there twice.”

A: “Oh really! When did you go?”

B: “I went in 2019 and again in 2022.”

Notice — the moment A asked “when”, B switched to Simple Past automatically.

 

Words that signal which tense to use

 

Present Perfect: ever, never, already, yet, just, recently, so far, before, once, twice

Simple Past: yesterday, last week, last year, in 2020, ago, when I was…, on Monday

 

The golden rule

If you can answer “when exactly?” — use Simple Past.

If the when doesn’t matter, or you’re talking about your whole life — use Present Perfect.

And the moment a specific time appears in the conversation, switch.

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