Present Perfect 1 (I have done)
Connecting the past to the present with have/has + past participle
What the Present Perfect Does
The present perfect links a past action to right now. Something happened before, and the result still matters.
Tom can’t find his key. He has lost his key. — He lost it at some point, and he still doesn’t have it.
The form is have/has + past participle:
| Subject | Auxiliary | Past participle examples |
|---|---|---|
| I / we / they / you | have (‘ve) | lost, done, finished, written |
| he / she / it | has (‘s) | lost, done, finished, written |
The past participle often ends in -ed (finished, decided), but many common verbs are irregular (lost, done, written, been).
Announcing New Information
When you say “something has happened,” you’re usually sharing news — something that just changed.
- The server is down. There has been an outage.
- HR has announced new working-from-home guidelines.
- I ‘ve cut my finger. Where’s the first-aid kit?
The Past Has a Result Now
Every present perfect sentence points back to now. The past action created a situation that still holds:
| Present perfect sentence | What it means now |
|---|---|
| Tom has lost his key. | He doesn’t have it now. |
| She told me the password, but I ‘ve forgotten it. | I can’t remember it now. |
| Sarah is still here. She hasn’t left the office. | She is here now. |
| I can’t find the report. Have you seen it? | Do you know where it is now? |
Gone (to) vs. Been (to)
These two get mixed up a lot. The difference is about where the person is right now.
| Sentence | Where is the person? |
|---|---|
| James has gone to the London office. | He is there now, or on his way. |
| Amy has been to the London office. | She went and came back. She’s here now. |
Just, Already, Yet
Three words that pair naturally with the present perfect:
Just = a short time ago
- ‘Is the manager free?’ ‘No, she ’s just stepped into a meeting.’
- I ‘ve just sent you the spreadsheet. Check your inbox.
Already = sooner than expected
- ‘Don’t forget to submit your timesheet.’ ‘I ‘ve already submitted it.’
- ‘When is the delivery arriving?’ ‘It ’s already arrived.’
Yet = until now (questions and negatives only)
- *Has the client confirmed the order yet?*
- I’ve drafted the email, but I haven’t sent it yet.
Present Perfect or Past Simple?
You can often use either one. The present perfect stresses the connection to now; the past simple just reports what happened.
| Present perfect | Past simple |
|---|---|
| Ben isn’t here. He ’s gone out. | Ben isn’t here. He went out. |
| I ‘ve just had lunch. | I just had lunch. |
Both are correct. The present perfect is more common in British English; American English leans toward the past simple in casual speech.
Quick Self-Check
'Where is David?' 'He _____ to the warehouse.' (He is there now.)
Select your answer:
I sent the invoice to the client, but she _____ yet.
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'Would you like some coffee?' 'No thanks. I _____ one.'
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We can't start the meeting. Two team members _____.
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'Don't forget to sign the contract.' 'I _____ it.'
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