Grammatical tense
The factual accuracy of this article is disputed: seeGrammatical tense is a way languages express the time or place at which an event described by a sentence occurs. In English, this is a property of a verb form, and expresses only time-related information (English does not have spatial tenses). Tense, along with mood and person, are three ways in which verb forms are frequently characterized in Indo-European languages.
The exact number of tenses in a language is often a matter of some debate. The more complex tenses in English are formed by combining a particular tense of the verb with certain verbal auxiliaries, the most common of which are various forms of "be", various forms of "have", and the modal auxiliary "will." An example of some generally-recognized English tenses using the verb "to go" is shown below:
| Tense | To Go | Special Notes |
| Simple Present | I go. | For many verbs, this is used to express habit or ability ("I play the guitar"). |
| Simple Past (Preterite) | I went. | In English (unlike in some languages with aorist aspects), this implies that the action took place in the past and that it is not taking place now. |
| Simple Future | I will go. | This can be used to express intention, prediction, and other senses. |
| Present Continuous | I am going. | This is used to express current action in English (Most other languages use the simple present tense). Note that this form can also be used to express future actions ("We're going to the movies tonight"). |
| Past Continuous | I was going. | |
| Future Continuous | I will be going. | |
| Present Perfect | I have gone. | This is usually used to express that an event happened at an unspecified or unknown time in the past. |
| Present Perfect Continuous | I have been going. | This is used to express that an event or habit started at some time in the past and continues to the present. |
| Past Perfect (Pluperfect) | I had gone. | This expresses that an action was completed before some other event. |
| Past Perfect Continuous | I had been going. | This is usually coupled with a duration, indicating that an event was ongoing for a specific time and was completed before a specific event. |
| Future Perfect | I will have gone. | |
| Future Perfect Continuous | I will have been going. |
For some negatives, questions and emphasis of the simple present and simple past, forms of "do" are used:
- "Do I go?" "I do not go." "I do go!"
- "Did I go?" "I did not go." "I did go!"
- "I am going to go."
- "I was going to go."
- Biber, D., S. Johansson, G. Leech, S. Conrad & E. Finegan. 1999. Longman grammar of spoken and written English. Harlow, Longman.
- Huddleston, R. & G. Pullum. 2002. The Cambridge grammar of the English language. Cambridge, CUP.
''See also: Grammar, Grammatical aspect, Grammatical mood, Grammatical voice, English grammar