A. Study this example situation:
Sarah went to a party last week. Paul went to the
party too, but they didn't see each other. Paul left the
party at 10.30 and Sarah arrived at 11 o'clock. So:
When Sarah arrived at the party, Paul wasn't there.
He had gone home.
Had gone is the past perfect (simple):
I/we/they/you he/she/it |
jhad |
(=I 'd etc.) (= he'd et c.) | gone seen finished etc. |
The past perfect simple is had+ past participle (gone/
seen/ finished etc).
Sometimes we talk about something that happened in t he past:
¡ Sarah arrived at the party.
This is the starting point of the story. Then, if we want to
talk about things that happened before this
time, we use the past perfect (had ... ):
¡ When Sarah arrived at the party, Paul had already gone
home.
Some more examples:
¡ When we got home last night, we found t hat somebody had
broken into the flat.
¡ Karen didn't want to go to the cinema with us because she'd
already seen the movie.
¡ At first I thought I'd done the right thing, but I soon
realised that I'd made a big mistake.
¡ The man sitting next to me on the plane was very nervous.
He hadn't flown before.
or ... He had never flown before.
B. Compare the present perfect (have seen etc.)
and the past perfect (had seen etc.):
Present perfect ¡ Who is that woman? I've seen her before, but I can't remember where. ¡ We aren't hungry. We've just had lunch. ¡ The house is dirty. They haven't cleaned it for weeks. |
Past perfect ¡ I wasn't sure who she was. I'd seen her before, but I couldn't remember where. ¡ We weren't hungry. We'd just had lunch. ¡ The house was dirty. They hadn't cleaned it for weeks. |
C. Compare the past simple (Left, was etc.) and the past perfect (had left, had been etc.):
¡ A: Was Tom there when you arrived? B: Yes, but he Left soon afterwards. ¡ Kate wasn't at home when I phoned. She was at her mother/s house. |
¡ A: Was Tom there when you arrived? B: No, he had already Left. ¡ Kate had just got home when I phoned. She had been at her mother's house. |
1:14 AM
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