AFPSAT Verbal Ability — Tenses — Perfect & ProgressiveCheat Sheet
A printable cheat sheet for Tenses — Perfect & Progressive, built for AFPSAT reviewers who want one go-to reference in the final stretch. Covers formulas, key definitions, common question types, and the Armed Forces of the Philippines-specific twists you will see on AFPSAT day.
Exam context
On the AFPSAT 2026, the Verbal Ability subtest carries a "Core" weight in Armed Forces of the Philippines's pattern. Tenses — Perfect & Progressive lands at position 4th out of 7 in the standard review order. Target score is AFP-set percentile, and roughly a meaningful share of items come from Verbal Ability on a typical AFPSAT paper.
Tenses — Perfect & Progressive - Cheat sheet
Your last-minute revision companion for mastering perfect and progressive tenses before the CSE exam
Sections
Formulas
Formula
Subject + has/have + past participle
Meaning
has (singular subjects), have (plural subjects), past participle (third form of verb)
Watch Out
Don't confuse with simple past - present perfect has no specific time mentioned
When To Use
Actions completed at unspecified time in past or continuing to present
Section Title
Present Perfect Tense
Important Facts
- Use 'has' with singular subjects (he, she, it)
- Use 'have' with plural subjects and 'I', 'you'
- Never use specific time expressions (yesterday, last week)
- Common time markers: ever, never, already, yet, just, since, for
- Negative: haven't/hasn't + past participle
- Question: Have/Has + subject + past participle
Key Definitions
Term
Present Perfect
Example
I have visited Manila five times
Definition
Tense showing completed actions with present relevance or unspecified past time
Term
Past Participle
Example
Regular: walked, talked; Irregular: gone, written
Definition
Third form of verb (regular: -ed, irregular: various forms)
Formulas
Formula
Subject + has/have + been + present participle (-ing)
Meaning
has/have (auxiliary), been (progressive marker), -ing form (ongoing action)
Watch Out
Only use with dynamic verbs, not static verbs (be, seem, know)
When To Use
Actions that started in past and continue to present or recently finished
Section Title
Present Perfect Progressive
Important Facts
- Emphasizes duration and continuity of action
- Use 'for' with time periods (for two hours)
- Use 'since' with starting points (since Monday)
- No progressive form for 'be' verbs
- Can indicate recently completed actions with visible results
- Time expressions: lately, recently (for indefinite duration)
Key Definitions
Term
Present Perfect Progressive
Example
She has been studying for three hours
Definition
Tense showing ongoing actions from past to present with current relevance
Term
Dynamic vs Static Verbs
Example
Dynamic: run, write; Static: be, know, love
Definition
Dynamic verbs show action/change; static verbs show states/conditions
Diagrams To Know
- Present participle formation rules diagram
Formulas
Formula
Subject + had + past participle
Meaning
had (auxiliary for all subjects), past participle (completed action)
Watch Out
Must show sequence - one action before another, not just any past action
When To Use
Action completed before another past action or specific past time
Section Title
Past Perfect Tense
Important Facts
- 'Had' is used for all subjects (singular and plural)
- Shows 'past in the past' relationship
- Common with time expressions: before, after, when, by the time
- Used in reported speech after said, told, thought
- Often paired with simple past tense
- Can use 'just' for recently completed past actions
Key Definitions
Term
Past Perfect
Example
When I arrived, they had already left
Definition
Tense showing earlier of two past actions or past action before specific time
Term
Sequence of Events
Example
First: had finished (past perfect), Then: arrived (simple past)
Definition
Past perfect shows the earlier action, simple past shows the later action
Formulas
Formula
Subject + had + been + present participle (-ing)
Meaning
had been (past progressive auxiliary), -ing form (ongoing past action)
Watch Out
Both actions must be in the past; shows duration before interruption
When To Use
Continuous action in progress when another past action occurred
Section Title
Past Perfect Progressive
Important Facts
- Shows continuous action that was in progress before interruption
- Both parts of sentence are in the past
- Use 'for' with duration (for three hours)
- Use 'since' with starting time (since morning)
- Can switch clause order with comma rules
- Common with: when, before, by the time, until
Key Definitions
Term
Past Perfect Progressive
Example
I had been working for two hours when she called
Definition
Tense showing ongoing past action interrupted by another past action
Formulas
Formula
Subject + will/shall + have + past participle
Meaning
will/shall (future auxiliary), have (perfect marker), past participle (completed future action)
Watch Out
Must have definitive end time; use simple future if no specific completion time
When To Use
Action that will be completed by specific future time
Section Title
Future Perfect Tense
Important Facts
- Use 'will' for all subjects (modern usage)
- Use 'shall' traditionally with 'I' and 'we'
- Requires specific future time reference
- Common with: by the time, before, when (future context)
- Shows completion before another future event
- Often used in conditional sentences
Key Definitions
Term
Future Perfect
Example
By 2025, I will have graduated from college
Definition
Tense showing action that will be completed before specific future time
Formulas
Formula
Subject + will + have + been + present participle (-ing)
Meaning
will have been (future perfect progressive auxiliary), -ing form (ongoing future action)
Watch Out
Not used with non-action verbs; requires duration or future time reference
When To Use
Ongoing action that will have specific duration at future time
Section Title
Future Perfect Progressive
Important Facts
- Emphasizes duration of future ongoing action
- Requires time expressions showing duration or future point
- Can show cause of future situation
- Not used with stative verbs (be, seem, know)
- Often indicates future consequences of ongoing action
- May have duration only or future reference only
Key Definitions
Term
Future Perfect Progressive
Example
By December, I will have been studying here for four years
Definition
Tense showing ongoing action with specific duration at future point
Must Remember
- Perfect tenses use past participle; progressive tenses use present participle (-ing)
- Present perfect: has/have + past participle (no specific time)
- Past perfect: had + past participle (earlier of two past actions)
- Future perfect: will + have + past participle (completed by future time)
- Progressive forms show ongoing actions; only use with dynamic verbs
- Use 'for' with duration, 'since' with starting points
- Past perfect shows sequence: earlier action (past perfect) before later action (simple past)
- Present perfect progressive: ongoing action from past to present
- Future perfect progressive: ongoing action with duration at future point
- Never use progressive forms with stative verbs (be, seem, know, love)
Last Minute Tips
- If you see specific time (yesterday, last week), use simple past, NOT present perfect
- When choosing between perfect and progressive, ask: Does it emphasize completion or ongoing duration?
- For past perfect, look for two past actions - the earlier one gets past perfect
- Remember: Regular verbs add -ed for past participle; irregular verbs have unique forms
- In exam questions, time expressions are your biggest clue for choosing the right tense
Comparison Tables
Rows
Values
- has/have + past participle
- Completed actions, unspecified time
- Past to present
- I have finished my homework
Property
Present Perfect
Values
- has/have + been + -ing
- Ongoing actions, emphasis on duration
- Past to present (continuing)
- I have been studying for hours
Property
Present Perfect Progressive
Values
- had + past participle
- Earlier of two past actions
- Past before past
- I had eaten before he arrived
Property
Past Perfect
Values
- had + been + -ing
- Ongoing past action before interruption
- Continuous past before past
- I had been sleeping when you called
Property
Past Perfect Progressive
Columns
- Tense
- Form
- Use
- Time Focus
- Example
Table Title
Perfect vs Progressive Tenses Comparison
Rows
Values
- Perfect Progressive
- Length of time
- for two hours, for years
Property
for (duration)
Values
- Perfect Progressive
- When action started
- since Monday, since 2020
Property
since (starting point)
Values
- Perfect
- Before expected time
- I have already finished
Property
already
Values
- Perfect (negative/question)
- Up to now
- Haven't finished yet
Property
yet
Values
- Perfect
- Very recently
- I have just arrived
Property
just
Columns
- Time Expression
- Tense
- Meaning
- Example
Table Title
Time Expression Guide
Previous chapter
Subject-Verb Agreement
Next chapter
Vocabulary — Modals, Affixes, Context Clues & Word Usage
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