"Went" is the simple past tense of "go". The past participle is "gone", so the past perfect is "had gone".
Neither is correct ... The correct for the present perfect continuous is: "I/we/you/they had been going," or "He/she/it has been going." The correct for the the past perfect simple is: "I/we/you/they had gone," or "He/she/it has gone."
No. You cannot say I have went somewhere. You can say: 1. I went there. (simple form of past tense) or 2. I have gone there. (present perfect tense)
infinitive: go past: went past participle: gone
Past simple tense has got one verb in the past form -- I went to the shop yesterday.Past perfect is formed with had + past participle -- I had gone to the shop.Past simple is used to talk about something that happened at a specific time in the past and is now finished.Past perfect is used to talk about an event in the past that happened before another event in the past. This second event is usually in past simple.Eg The train had left when I arrived at the station.had left (past perfect) happened before arrived(past simple).
"Went" is the simple past tense of "go". The past participle is "gone", so the past perfect is "had gone".
gone
Gone is the past participle of 'go'. The simple past tense of 'go' is went.
The simple past tense is 'went'. The past participle is 'gone'.
The simple past tense is "went." The past participle is "gone."
"Gone" is the past participle of "go" and is used when something has moved away from a location or is no longer present. "Went" is the past tense of "go" and indicates the action of moving towards a destination in the past.
The verb is "go." So it's simple present tense. Simple Present: Today I go. Simple Past: Yesterday I went. Simple Future: I will go. Present Perfect: I have gone. Past Perfect: I had gone. Future Perfect: I will have gone.
Well first of all I think you mean past tense and so the past tense for goes is went.The past tense/aspects of the highly irregular verb 'go' are:* went (simple past - all persons)* has gone (present perfect - 3rd person only - he/she/it)* have gone ( " " - other persons - I/you/we/they)* had gone (past perfect - all persons)The negative forms are:* did not go (simple past - all persons)* has not gone (present perfect - 3rd person only - he/she/it)* have not gone ( " " - other persons - I/you/we/they)* had not gone (past perfect - all persons)The interrogative forms are:did * go? (simple past - all persons)has * gone? (present perfect - 3rd person only - he/she/it)have * gone? ( " " - other persons - I/you/we/they)had * gone? (past perfect - all persons)
* Past simple: went. e.g. My dad went to New York last year. * Past participle: gone. e.g. Sorry, my sister is out. She has gone to the shops.
Neither is correct ... The correct for the present perfect continuous is: "I/we/you/they had been going," or "He/she/it has been going." The correct for the the past perfect simple is: "I/we/you/they had gone," or "He/she/it has gone."
No. You cannot say I have went somewhere. You can say: 1. I went there. (simple form of past tense) or 2. I have gone there. (present perfect tense)
Anything which has been done in past but yet not finished, for this we use present perfect like He has gone to while for any actions which take place in past and is finished , for that we use simple past like He went to.