I had spoken.
She has not spoken to him since their disagreement.
A perfect tense describes actions or linkages with a definite ending time. For a present perfect, the action or linkage is already complete at the time of writing or speaking but may not have been completed prior to writing or speaking the tense. For a past perfect tense, the action or linkage was completed before a sentence containing the tense was spoken or written. A future perfect tense forecasts that an action or linkage will be completed at some time in the future.To make perfect
I have never been so scared in my life! What have you done here?
The present perfect tense is used for an action that began in the past and that continues into the present. For example, "We have lived in the same house since 1997." is a sentence in the present perfect tense. "I have always liked chocolate." is the present perfect tense.
The tense of the verb "left" in the sentence is past perfect. This tense is formed by using the auxiliary verb "had" before the past participle of the main verb, and it is used to show that an action was completed before another past action.
It's the past perfect continuous tense.
The present perfect tense of the verb love is have loved or has loved.We would say: I have loved, you have loved, we have loved, they have loved, he has loved, she has loved, and it has loved (although it is hard to think of a sentence using it has loved.)
To make present perfect you use have + past participle.The past participles of regular verbs are easy to remember they all end in -edeg walk / walked / walked. (pp is bold)So you need to learn the past participles of irregular verbseg run / ran / runA past sentence with a regular verb is: I walked to the store.The present perfect using walk is: I have walked to the store.A past sentence using an irregular verb is: They ate the cake.The present perfect using eat is: They have eaten the cake.
Past perfect is - had + past participle and the past participle of cling is clung.A past perfect sentence using clung:I had clung to the boat for two hours
The past perfect tense of send is had sent.
That would be future tense.
Using the verb 'do': Simple past tense: did Present perfect tense: I/You/We/They have done. He/She/It has done.