Have/has augmented.
The present perfect tense follows this structure: Subject + have/has + past participle. For example: I have watched. She has watched.
The present perfect is has/have + a past participle.I have seen that movie already.She has seen that movie, too.
Past perfect is formed with - had + past participle.In the sentence - I had some dates - had is the past form of have and had is also the past participle of haveSo your sentence in past perfect would be - I had had some dates.In present perfect - I have had some dates.Using another verb (not have) - I had eatensome dates. I had been to London.
Subject + had + been + present participle For example, I had been singing.
The present perfect tense of copy is:I/You/We/They have copied.He/She/It has copied.
The present perfect tense is used to indicate that an action was completed at some point in the past, with a connection to the present moment. It is formed by using the auxiliary verb "have" or "has" followed by a past participle.
I have lain on bed for more than five hours
"I have been doing something" is an example of the present perfect continuous.
Yes, the sentence 'He has been working all day' is in the present perfect continuous tense.
The present perfect tense of "destroy" is "have destroyed." For example: "I have destroyed the old building."
She has smiled brightly all day.
I have worked all day.I have just cleaned the floor.I haven't written the homework yet.
Past perfect: I had finished my homework before going to bed. Present perfect: She has eaten lunch already. Future perfect: By next year, we will have completed our project.
it could work in future perfect and in present perfect Example : Present Perfect : I have played football in the backyard . Future Perfect : I will have played football in the backyard .
There are two verbs in this sentence have borrowed = present perfect was = past
The perfect tenses in English (present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect) are formed using a combination of the auxiliary verb "have" (or "has" for present perfect) and the past participle of the main verb. They are used to show completion or continuity of an action at a particular point in time.
She is not a verb so it doesn't show tense.When she is the subject of a sentence the present perfect is has + past participle.She has eaten the cake.