Use of Tenses

Use Of Tenses

The future tense is time. This tense is used to describe an action that has not happened yet and will happen sometime in the future. The future continuous perfect describes an action that spans a period of time and will be performed in relation to some other future event. The continuous past perfect describes an ongoing action that, like the past perfect, was performed in relation to another event that happened close to the present.
    
This time is used to anticipate the moment in the future when a continuous action will be completed. The present tense is used to express what is happening now or is happening at the present moment.
    
The past is more direct than the present – you only use it to talk about actions, events, or feelings that happened before. Use the past to refer to past events, previous conditions, or completed processes. When you’re referring to a search that took place during an indefinite period of time in the past (rather than a specific paragraph or search result), use the present perfect tense instead of the present. If you are writing about specific research methods, the process of research and data collection, or what happened during the research process, you will use the past tense as often as you normally would in a conversation.
    
In cases where it is useful to compare different ideas from different periods, past and present or perfect present can be used for this. Sometimes it can be useful to change tenses to describe actions that happen at different times. Use the present simple tense to describe events or activities that you are focused on; other tenses may be used to refer to different tenses in the text itself.
    
The present continuous can also be used to talk about a future action or an action that is happening at the same time as another action. It is also used to influence the present, ongoing past action in one way or another. The simple present tense can also be used to describe direct actions that do not specifically refer to the past or future. The present continuous tense is used to denote something that happened in the past and stopped at a particular moment.
    
The present continuous is another way to talk about the past, but unlike the simple past, it is used to describe what happened before another action that happened in the past. Like the present continuous tense, this tense is used to describe something that started in the past and continued for a certain period of time. No matter how long it lasts – minutes or years – you will still use the Present Continuous. For example, use the simple future tense when strongly predicting the future, or use the progressive present when describing events that are changing at the time of writing.
    
The tense used in the first sentence (Present Simple) is more common in academic writing than the tense used in the second sentence (Present Continuous). The present simple is the most commonly used tense in academic writing, so when in doubt, the present simple should be your default choice. The simple present tense is the best choice when you’re summarizing research in an abstract, describing your goals, or outlining the structure of your paper in an introduction.
    
Present Simple is used when talking about something that happens right at the moment when the action is described, neither before nor after. The present simple tense should be used to describe completed actions and events, including steps in the research process and background historical information. The past tense is used to describe events that have already happened (for example, at the beginning of the day, yesterday, last week, three years ago).
    
The future describes something that has not yet happened (for example, after, tomorrow, next week, next year, three years from now). For example, the future tense: this tense could be tomorrow, next week, two years from now, etc. The future tense expresses an action or event that will happen.
    
Use the Past Perfect to express actions that happened in the more distant past and were repeated many times. The present perfect tense is also used to describe an action that began in real life in the past, but did not end, that is, it can continue or be repeated in the present or in the future. This usage is different from the mere past, which is used for actions that were completed in the past with no possible continuation or repetition in the present or future. This time refers to the present tense, present, past or future, depending on when the event occurred, is happening, or will occur.

When talking about simultaneous actions in the future, usually one verb is in the continuous future, and the other in the simple present. Time-oriented words and phrases such as “before”, “after”, “time-based” and others, when used to link two or more actions in time, can be good indicators of the need for a perfective verb in a sentence.
    
The tenses used above emphasize the contrast between the old point of view (from Stanley Fish) indicated by the past tense and the new point of view (from “recent literary critics”) indicated by the present or present perfect. According to corpus research, three tenses are most commonly used in academic writing: present simple, past simple, and present perfect (Biber et al., 1999; Caplan, 2012).

As a general rule, writers keep time for the main speech and indicate timeline changes by changing the time from the main time, which is usually the simple past or present. Some writers use the present to tell stories, a technique called the “historical present” that creates an atmosphere of liveliness and immediacy.

Tense plays an important role in the life of every individual. It helps to understand the language easily. It even plays an important role in writing and speaking. However, tenses help reduce grammatical errors in your writing and speaking. It also helps in improving your English skill level.

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