Tenses Masterclass (with Timelines, Examples, Quizzes)

Mastering English tenses is essential for writing clearly and speaking fluently. Whether you’re preparing for school exams, competitive tests, or improving your general communication, this Tenses Masterclass will guide you through all 12 English tenses with timelines, real-life examples, and interactive quizzes to test your understanding.


✅ What Are Tenses?

Tenses are grammatical tools that tell us when an action takes place: in the past, present, or future. They help structure time in language and give clarity to your communication.

🔗 Tenses Are Divided Into 3 Main Types:

  1. Present Tense – Actions happening now.
  2. Past Tense – Actions that happened before now.
  3. Future Tense – Actions that will happen later.

Each of these is further divided into 4 aspects:

  • Simple
  • Continuous (Progressive)
  • Perfect
  • Perfect Continuous

So, we have 12 English Tenses in total.


📊 Tense Timeline Chart

Tense NameTimelineSignal Words
Simple PresentNow/Regularlyalways, often, never, every day
Present ContinuousRight Nownow, at the moment, currently
Present PerfectUntil Nowjust, already, yet, ever, never
Present Perfect ContinuousSince/Past Until Nowfor, since, all day, lately
Simple PastCompleted Pastyesterday, last week, in 2010
Past ContinuousPast in Progresswhile, as, when
Past PerfectBefore Past Timebefore, already, by the time
Past Perfect ContinuousDuration Before Pastfor, since, how long
Simple FutureWill Happentomorrow, soon, next week
Future ContinuousOngoing in Futureat this time tomorrow, soon
Future PerfectCompleted in Futureby then, by next week, before
Future Perfect ContinuousDuration Until Future Pointfor, since, by the time

🎯 Examples & Explanation for All 12 Tenses

1. Simple Present

Structure: Subject + V1 (+ s/es)
Example: She plays the piano.
Use: Habits, facts, general truths.


2. Present Continuous

Structure: Subject + is/am/are + V1+ing
Example: I am studying English.
Use: Actions happening now.


3. Present Perfect

Structure: Subject + has/have + V3
Example: He has finished his homework.
Use: Completed actions with present relevance.


4. Present Perfect Continuous

Structure: Subject + has/have been + V1+ing
Example: They have been working since morning.
Use: Action that started in the past and is still continuing.


5. Simple Past

Structure: Subject + V2
Example: We watched a movie yesterday.
Use: Completed past actions.


6. Past Continuous

Structure: Subject + was/were + V1+ing
Example: She was cooking when I arrived.
Use: Ongoing past action interrupted by another.


7. Past Perfect

Structure: Subject + had + V3
Example: He had left before I came.
Use: Action completed before another past action.


8. Past Perfect Continuous

Structure: Subject + had been + V1+ing
Example: They had been waiting for two hours.
Use: Duration before another past event.


9. Simple Future

Structure: Subject + will + V1
Example: I will visit London next week.
Use: Decisions, promises, future facts.


10. Future Continuous

Structure: Subject + will be + V1+ing
Example: She will be sleeping at 10 PM.
Use: Action in progress at a specific time in the future.


11. Future Perfect

Structure: Subject + will have + V3
Example: By 2026, he will have completed his course.
Use: Action completed before a point in the future.


12. Future Perfect Continuous

Structure: Subject + will have been + V1+ing
Example: By June, they will have been working here for 10 years.
Use: Duration before a certain point in the future.


🧠 Practice Quizzes (Test Yourself)

🔹 Quiz 1: Identify the Tense

Choose the correct tense for the sentence below:

  1. “I ________ (read) a novel since last night.”
    • a) read
    • b) have read
    • c) have been reading
    • d) had read
      Correct Answer: c) have been reading
  2. “She ________ (go) to Paris in 2018.”
    Correct Answer: went

(Get full quiz set at the end of the article!)


📚 Common Mistakes with Tenses

  • Wrong: I am knowing the answer.
    Correct: I know the answer.
  • Wrong: He has went to the market.
    Correct: He has gone to the market.
  • Wrong: I will be go tomorrow.
    Correct: I will go tomorrow.