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20 - Aspect: perfect

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 February 2023

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Summary

Introduction

Continuing our exploration of aspect, we now look at the perfect. Just to recapitulate: there are two aspects in English – progressive and perfect – and they combine with the two tenses, present and past, to provide a range of meanings that include distance in time, temporariness, completion, being ‘in progress’ and retrospection.

Tasks

1 Perfect aspect

As with the progressive, the auxiliary system allows different combinations of tense and aspect. Whereas the progressive is formed with the auxiliary be + present participle, the perfect is formed with the auxiliary have + past participle.

Can you identify the examples of perfect aspect in the following sentences (from the Cambridge English Corpus)? Note that not all of the sentences include a form of perfect aspect: the presence of have does not automatically indicate perfect aspect!

  • a My wife has always liked Santa Fe for the art and the culture. (has liked = present perfect)

  • b An additional 149 jobs have been lost in the state’s slumping technology sector.

  • c Her husband had forgotten to take out the trash.

  • d ‘She had a tooth extracted last week,’ said Staff.

  • e In recent days, rainfall in Beijing has been unusually high.

  • f Parents have to pay at least 50% of tuition.

  • g When I finish I will have had 34 years of elective office.

  • h He has been signing copies of his autobiography.

  • i Never in my life had I known a more retiring man.

  • j Someone has smashed the rear window of his car.

  • k A day before the flight, the suspect had been stopped and questioned by police.

2 Present perfect

  • a Here is a grammar ‘awareness raising’ task. Can you do it?

  • b What grammatical clues enabled you to do the task? For example, what difference in meaning is implied between he lived … and he has lived …?

  • c What does this suggest about the basic meaning of the present perfect?

3 Present perfect

‘We use the present perfect to refer to events in the past but which connect to the present’ (Carter et al. 2011).

  • a Here are some more facts about David Mamet. How do they ‘connect to the present’?

Type
Chapter
Information
About Language
Tasks for Teachers of English
, pp. 126 - 131
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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