Perfect Sentences
Past Participles
Timings
Blending Sentences
What happened first
100

Which verb do we always use when writing a Past Perfect sentence, no matter the subject?

Had

100

What is the past participle of “be”?

been

100

In the sentence “I had eaten dinner before I watched TV,” which event happened first?

I had eaten dinner.

100

Combine: “He ate lunch.” + “He went to the park.” (Use before)

He had eaten lunch before he went to the park.

100

Who acted first? “I had called before you texted.”

I called first.

200

Complete the sentence correctly: “By the time we arrived at the theater, the movie ___ already ___.”

had already started

200

What is the past participle of “fly”?

flown

200

Why do we use the Past Perfect instead of the Simple Past when describing a sequence of past events?

To show clearly which event happened first.

200

State 2 examples: “She finished her project.” + “She took a nap.” (use before and after)

She had finished her project before she took a nap.
She took a nap after she had finished her project.

200

Who did the first action? Lucie had finished before Cory started the test even though Cory had arrived to class earlier.

Cory had arrived to class

300

Rewrite the sentence “She left before he arrived” so that it clearly shows which action happened first using the Past Perfect tense.

She had left before he arrived.

300

Identify and correct the mistake: “She had went to the park.”

Correct form: “She had gone to the park.”

300

Rearrange and state the proper tense for the following into a Past Perfect sentence:  “She (wake up) late.” / “She (miss) the bus”

She had woken up late, so she missed the bus.

300

Identify both tenses and explain the order of events: “She had cleaned the kitchen when her guests arrived.”

“Had cleaned” = Past Perfect (earlier action); “arrived” = Simple Past (later action).

300

What does this tell you about when people sat down:
By the time the concert began, everyone had found their seats

They found their seats before the concert started.

400

Explain the difference in meaning between: “Greta locked the door when the thief got there” and “She had locked the door before the thief got there.”

In the first, both actions happen around the same time. In the second, Greta locking the door happened before the thief got there.

400

Choose the correct form and explain your choice: “The ball had (shook / shaken / shaked) before it stopped.”

shaken — because “shake” has the irregular participle “shaken.”

400

Write a sentence that tells two events in the past using Past Perfect for the earlier one. You must include a cause or reason.

Example: Kevin had forgotten his umbrella, so he got completely soaked when it started raining.

400

Mix the following into a single complex sentence using the Past Perfect: “The students completed their essays. The teacher collected them. The essays were due at noon.”

The students had completed their essays before the teacher collected them, which were due before noon.

400

List the order of events from the following short paragraph:
The pirates had followed the map but they ended up lost in the middle of sea. Previously a strange man had gifted them a map pointing to precious treasures. The men had become pirates because their families' were starving. Now, lost at sea, they needed to make a decision, sail back home or keep searching for the treasure. They had lost hope but decided to keep on sailing in search of it.

1. Their families' were starving so they became pirates

2. A strange man gifted them a map

3. The pirates follow the map but end up last at sea

4. They need to make a decision.

5. They lost hope but decided to keep on sailing looking for the treasure.

500

Create a Past Perfect sentence that includes a time expression (e.g., “by the time,” “after,” or “before”) and explains a cause-and-effect relationship between two past actions.

Example: By the time the teacher entered the room, the students had already finished the test.

500

Use three irregular past participles from the list (e.g., “forbid,” “draw,” “catch”) in one Past Perfect story sentence.

Example: The teacher had forbidden phones, but Laura had drawn on hers and caught everyone’s attention.

500

Organize the following events into two or three sentences in order using the Past Perfect and Simple Past:
a) Someone had left the woman's car unlocked.
b) Everything went quiet and the car drove off in the night.
c) The woman entered her car and started the engine.
d) She tried to fight and yell.
e) The woman had noticed the man in the backseat.

Example of sentences: Someone had left the woman's car unlocked but she entered her car and started the engine. The woman had noticed the man in the backseat so she tried to fight and yell. But everything went quiet and the car drove off in the night.

500

Create a 2–3 sentence story about a famous inventor/scientist (e.g., Marie Curie, Tesla, Einstein) using at least one Past Perfect and one Simple Past verb to show sequence

Tesla had studied electricity for years before he created his first alternating current motor.

500

Create sentences describing in the order you like the following events:

1. An announcement rang in the airport

2. 5 different children were lost

3. The police searched for the criminals

4. A suspicious group of masked women walked around.

5. The children were found hidden in the baggage area. 

5 different children had gotten lost so an announcement rang in the airport about it. A suspicious group of masked women had walked around as the police searched for the criminals. Luckily, the children were found hidden in the baggage area.