B1 present_perfect 5 min de leitura

Present Perfect: Repeated Actions

The Present Perfect for repeated actions connects your past frequencies to your current identity without using specific dates.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Used for actions that happened multiple times before now.
  • Do not mention specific times like 'yesterday' or 'at 5pm'.
  • Formula: Subject + have/has + V3 + frequency.
  • Focuses on the total experience up to the present moment.

Quick Reference

Subject Helper (Have/Has) Past Participle (V3) Frequency Word
I / You / We / They have watched twice
He / She / It has visited three times
I have tried many times
The team has won several times
You have asked repeatedly
She has lost her keys again

Exemplos-chave

3 de 8
1

I have seen that movie three times.

He visto esa película tres veces.

2

She has visited Paris many times.

Ella ha visitado París muchas veces.

3

It has rained four times this week.

Ha llovido cuatro veces esta semana.

🎯

The 'So Far' Strategy

If you are unsure, try adding 'so far' to the end of your sentence. If it makes sense, use Present Perfect! It highlights that the count might increase.

⚠️

The 'Ago' Trap

Never use the word 'ago' with 'have' or 'has'. 'Ago' is a magnet for the Simple Past. Use 'before' or just the number of times instead.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Used for actions that happened multiple times before now.
  • Do not mention specific times like 'yesterday' or 'at 5pm'.
  • Formula: Subject + have/has + V3 + frequency.
  • Focuses on the total experience up to the present moment.

Overview

Think about your favorite pizza place. How many times have you eaten there? Maybe it is five times. Maybe it is fifty. You are not saying exactly when you went. You are counting the experiences. This is where the Present Perfect shines. It tracks your life's scorecard up to today. It links your past actions to your present self. This grammar point acts like a bridge. It connects what you did before to who you are now. It is perfect for sharing your history without getting stuck in dates.

How This Grammar Works

Imagine a timeline in your head. The past is on the left. The present is right now. This grammar draws a line between them. It does not care about specific calendar dates. It cares about frequency and experience. We use it for things that happen again and again. These actions happened in the past. They might happen again in the future. They are part of your life story at this moment. Think of it like collecting stickers in an album. Each time you do the action, you add a sticker. The Present Perfect tells people how many stickers you have today. It is about the result of those repetitions. Even native speakers mess this up sometimes, so do not worry! Just focus on the total count.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Building these sentences is like assembling a simple sandwich.
  2. 2Pick your Subject. Use I, You, We, They, He, She, or It.
  3. 3Choose the correct helper. Use have for I, you, we, and they. Use has for he, she, and it.
  4. 4Find the Past Participle. This is often called the V3 form. For regular verbs, just add -ed. For irregular verbs, you must memorize them.
  5. 5Add your frequency. Use words like twice, three times, or many times.
  6. 6Example: I (subject) + have (helper) + visited (V3) + London four times (frequency).

When To Use It

Use this when the total count matters more than the date.

  • Life experiences: I have traveled to Japan three times. This shows you are an experienced traveler.
  • Recent repetitions: She has called me five times today. This shows frustration or urgency right now.
  • Unfinished periods: We have eaten at that cafe many times this month. Since the month is not over, you might go again.
  • Professional skills: I have managed three large projects. This works great in job interviews.

Think of it like a grammar traffic light. If you want to show a pattern of behavior, the light is green for Present Perfect. It tells the listener that this is not just a one-time thing.

When Not To Use It

Stop! There are red lights for this grammar too.

  • Do not use it with specific times. If you say yesterday, last night, or in 2010, use the Simple Past.
  • Do not use it if the action can never happen again. If a restaurant is closed forever, use Simple Past.
  • Avoid it if the person is no longer alive. We say Shakespeare wrote many plays, not has written.

The Present Perfect hates specific dates. It prefers words like so far, up to now, or already. If you see a clock or a calendar in your sentence, you probably need a different tense.

Common Mistakes

The biggest trap is using did instead of have.

  • I did see that movie three times.
  • I have seen that movie three times.

Another common error is using the wrong verb form.

  • I have went there twice.
  • I have gone there twice.

Watch out for the word ago.

  • I have seen him three times ago.
  • I have seen him three times.

Finally, do not forget the helper verb has for he, she, and it. People often say She seen it instead of She has seen it. It is a small word, but it does a lot of work!

Contrast With Similar Patterns

The Simple Past is a snapshot. The Present Perfect is a video.

Simple Past: I went to the gym on Monday. This is a closed door. It happened once. It is over.

Present Perfect: I have been to the gym twice this week. This is an open window. You might go again before Sunday.

Think of ordering food.

Simple Past: I ordered a burger. (That specific time).

Present Perfect: I have ordered this burger many times. (It is my favorite; I do it often).

The first is a single point on a map. The second is a well-worn path.

Quick FAQ

Q. Can I use many times with this?

A. Yes! It is the most common way to use it.

Q. What if I do not know the exact number?

A. Use several times or a few times. It still counts as repeated.

Q. Is has only for people?

A. No. Use it for companies or objects too. The car has broken down twice.

Q. Does it matter if the repetitions were long ago?

A. No. As long as the count matters today, use Present Perfect.

Reference Table

Subject Helper (Have/Has) Past Participle (V3) Frequency Word
I / You / We / They have watched twice
He / She / It has visited three times
I have tried many times
The team has won several times
You have asked repeatedly
She has lost her keys again
🎯

The 'So Far' Strategy

If you are unsure, try adding 'so far' to the end of your sentence. If it makes sense, use Present Perfect! It highlights that the count might increase.

⚠️

The 'Ago' Trap

Never use the word 'ago' with 'have' or 'has'. 'Ago' is a magnet for the Simple Past. Use 'before' or just the number of times instead.

💡

V3 is Key

Think of the Past Participle (V3) as a permanent status. Once you've done something three times, that 'status' stays with you forever.

💬

Job Interview Gold

Employers love this grammar. Saying 'I have used this software many times' sounds more professional than 'I used it a lot last year'.

Exemplos

8
#1 Basic repetition

I have seen that movie three times.

Focus: three times

He visto esa película tres veces.

The speaker is counting their total viewings.

#2 Unspecified frequency

She has visited Paris many times.

Focus: many times

Ella ha visitado París muchas veces.

Use 'many times' when you don't know the exact count.

#3 Edge case: Recent repetitions

It has rained four times this week.

Focus: four times

Ha llovido cuatro veces esta semana.

The week isn't over yet, so it might rain again.

#4 Edge case: So far

We have had three coffee breaks so far today.

Focus: so far

Hemos tenido tres descansos para café en lo que va del día.

'So far' emphasizes the count up to this moment.

#5 Formal usage

The company has updated its policy several times.

Focus: several times

La empresa ha actualizado su política varias veces.

Common in business reporting.

#6 Mistake corrected

✗ I have seen him yesterday. → ✓ I have seen him three times.

Focus: three times

He visto a él tres veces.

Never use specific past time markers with Present Perfect.

#7 Mistake corrected

✗ She has went there twice. → ✓ She has gone there twice.

Focus: gone

Ella ha ido allí dos veces.

Always use the V3 form (gone), not the V2 form (went).

#8 Advanced count

I have lost count of how many times I have told you.

Focus: lost count

He perdido la cuenta de cuántas veces te lo he dicho.

A common idiomatic way to express high frequency.

Teste-se

Choose the correct form to complete the sentence.

He ___ that restaurant five times since it opened.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: has visited

We use 'has visited' because we are counting repetitions up to the present.

Select the correct frequency phrase.

I have ___ tried to call the bank, but no one answers.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: several times

Present Perfect works with frequencies like 'several times', not specific past dates.

Identify the correct helper verb.

They ___ seen this play twice already.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: have

'They' requires the helper verb 'have'.

🎉 Pontuação: /3

Recursos visuais

Simple Past vs. Present Perfect

Simple Past
Specific Date I saw it on Tuesday.
One-time He went to Spain in 2015.
Present Perfect
Frequency I've seen it three times.
Total Experience He's been to Spain many times.

Choosing the Right Tense

1

Is there a specific time (e.g., yesterday)?

YES ↓
NO
Continue
2

Are you counting how many times it happened?

YES ↓
NO
Consider Simple Past

Common Frequency Words

🔢

Specific Counts

  • once
  • twice
  • three times
  • five times
🔄

General Frequency

  • many times
  • several times
  • a few times
  • often

Perguntas frequentes

20 perguntas

It means an action that happened more than once in the past. We use Present Perfect because we are looking at the total count of those actions from today's perspective.

Usually, we use Simple Present for daily habits. However, if you are counting the total occurrences this week or in your life, like I have run three times this week, then Present Perfect is correct.

Yes, 'I've' is just the contraction. It is much more common in speaking, while 'I have' sounds more formal or emphatic.

Because 'yesterday' is a finished time. Present Perfect needs an 'open' time connection to the present, and specific dates 'close' that connection.

Start with 'How many times have you...'. For example, How many times have you visited London? is the standard way to ask.

'Thrice' is very old-fashioned and rare. In modern English, always use three times to sound natural.

Yes! 'Never' is essentially saying the action has been repeated zero times. I have never been to Paris fits this pattern perfectly.

No, it works for any singular noun. The computer has crashed three times today is a perfectly good example.

If it is happening right now, use Present Continuous. Present Perfect is for the times it happened *before* this exact moment.

Yes. I have often wondered about that is correct. It describes a repeated mental action.

It is the third form of a verb. For 'eat', it is 'eaten'. You need this form to make the Present Perfect work.

No. You can say twice or a million times. The grammar remains exactly the same.

In grammar, 'perfect' means 'completed'. It means the individual actions are finished, but the experience is part of your present.

Yes. He has bitten his nails many times during the meeting. It works for any type of repetition.

Continuous focuses on the duration (how long). This pattern focuses on the result (how many times).

No. I have seen it twice does not need any extra punctuation.

Put 'not' after have/has. I have not seen that movie many times.

Yes! I have visited them three times since January. January marks the start of the counting period.

Yes. The light has flashed four times. It doesn't matter how long the action took.

It doesn't matter. Present Perfect only counts what has happened *up to now*. Your future plans don't change the past count.

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