Understanding Grammar: Past Simple v Past Perfect

In this week's Premier Skills English Podcast, Jack and Rich talk about a specific structure that learners often find difficult: the past perfect. They look at how we create the past perfect when we use it in real language and contrast its use with the past simple. They introduce the language in simple dialogues to help you understand the language in context and then give you some advice about when to use the past perfect. Further down the page, there are a number of explanations, the transcript, interactive activities, a quiz and a discussion to help you understand. Your task is to use the past perfect in three different situations. Don't forget to listen to the end of the podcast because we also have a new football phrase for you to guess. Enjoy!

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If you find the podcast difficult to understand, you can read the transcript and listen at the same time.

Read the transcript and listen at the same time.

How much did you understand?

In the podcast, Rich and Jack used some words and phrases that might be new for you. Do you know the words or phrases in bold?

It was embarrassing! Some of the students are really cheeky!

I’m all right but you have a face like thunder.

There were a few more tricky words in the podcast. Do you know what they all mean? Try the activity below, then, listen to the podcast again to hear how we used the words.

Activity 1: In this activity, try to match the words and phrases to the descriptions.

Manchester Utd would have lost more matches if David De Gea HADN'T MADE so many saves.

Manchester Utd would have lost more matches if David De Gea HADN'T MADE so many saves.

Past Perfect

In this week's podcast, Jack and Rich spoke about the past perfect. We use the past perfect when we are talking about the past and want to talk about something else which happened further in the past. We create the past perfect with had + past participle (third form of the verb). Here are a couple of examples from the podcast:

When I got home from work I discovered that my family had arranged a surprise birthday party.

I sat down and realised that someone had replaced my chair with a broken one.

In these sentences, we can see the most recent action(s) uses the past simple while the action before this uses the past perfect. The action that happened earlier can be a few minutes or many years earlier, this is not important. We use the past perfect to show that one action happened at an earlier time in the past than another action.

We often use the past perfect when we talk about problems and their causes. This is because the cause of a problem often happens at an earlier time. In this activity, match the problems (past simple) with their causes (past perfect). Then, look at each sentence and think about why we use the past perfect.

Activity 2: In this activity, match the problems (past simple) with their causes (past perfect).

Jack wishes that Arsenal HAD WON the Cup not Manchester City!

Jack wishes that Arsenal HAD WON the Cup not Manchester City!

Are there any other ways we use the past perfect?

The past perfect is used most often to compare two different times in the past but it can also be used in some other ways. Some of these uses also compare two different times in the past:

  • to talk about past wishes (I wish Arsenal had beaten Manchester City last week.) 
  • to talk about past conditions (Manchester Utd would have lost if David De Gea hadn't made a brilliant save.)
  • to talk about something someone else said i.e. reported speech (In the podcast, Jack said that his laptop had crashed.)
  • to talk about experience up to a point in the past (That goal by Pele was the best I'd ever seen until I saw that goal Ibrahimovic scored last night.)

In this activity, take a look at the sentences that use the past perfect and decide why we are using the past perfect in each case.

Activity 3: In this activity, take a look at the sentences and match them to the reasons why we are using the past perfect.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic PLAYED in many countries before he arrived in England.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic PLAYED in many countries before he arrived in England.

Using the Past Perfect

Our task for you this week is to use the past perfect in three different ways. We have three mini tasks for you to do. We want to see examples of the past perfect in all of your answers. If you need some help, listen again to Jack's answers in the podcast. Write your answers in the comments section at the bottom of the page.

  1. Mini task number one: Tell us about a time that you were too late for something? Why were you late? And why were you too late?
  2. Mini task number two: Tell us an important or funny conversation that you have had with someone recently. What did they say?
  3. Mini task number three: Tell us something that you did last year and then tell us what you would have done if you hadn't done this thing.

Quiz

What do you think?

In this week’s podcast, Jack and Rich spoke about the past perfect and roleplayed two situations.

Did you always behave in the classroom? Did you or your classmates ever play a joke or trick on a teacher?

Does your computer ever crash? Do you ever have WIFI problems?

Look at the tasks above about the past perfect and write your answers.

Remember to write your guess for this week's football phrase, too!

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