How to Form English Questions
Beginner to Elementary Grammar A1
In this article, Beginner to Elementary Grammar A1 learners study how to form English questions.
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Beginner to Elementary Grammar A1
In this article, Beginner to Elementary Grammar A1 learners study how to form English questions.
This lesson explains the past simple in clear, practical English.
Use it for completed actions, past habits, finished routines, and historical facts.
The main form is: Subject + past verb (regular verbs end in -ed, while irregular verbs change form).
Common time words include yesterday, last week, an hour ago, in 2015, when I was young.
You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.
This lesson explains the present perfect continuous in clear, practical English.
Use it for actions that started in the past and continue now, or recent actions with present evidence.
The main form is: Subject + have or has + been + verb-ing.
Common time words include for two hours, since Monday, all day, recently, lately, how long.
This summary gives you one clear map for all twelve English tenses.
English tenses combine time: present, past, and future, with aspect: simple, continuous, perfect, and perfect continuous.
This lesson explains the future perfect continuous in clear, practical English.
This lesson explains the past perfect continuous in clear, practical English.
Use it for actions that continued up to another past action or past time.
The main form is: Subject + had been + verb-ing.
The Past Perfect tense acts as the ultimate "past in the past" for complex storytelling. It clarifies which of two past actions happened first, preventing timeline confusion. To form it, writers combine the auxiliary "had" with the past participle of the main verb. Without this tense, establishing a clear chronological narrative can become incredibly difficult.
This lesson explains the future continuous in clear, practical English.
Use it for actions that will be in progress at a specific future time.
This lesson explains the past continuous in clear, practical English.
Use it for actions in progress at a past time, background actions, and interrupted past actions.
The main form is: Subject + was or were + verb-ing.