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What does “cost an arm and a leg” mean?
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A) Very cheap
20%
B) Easy to get
0%
C) Very small
80%
D) Very expensive
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Why Your Dreams Die When You Speak Them | The Power of Silence | A Life-Changing Story
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Pesent Perfect Tense

1- What is Present Perfect?

The present perfect tense is used to talk about:
actions that happened in the past but are connected to the present

2- Structure / Form

Affirmative (Positive):
Subject + have / has + past participle (PP)


Examples:
I have finished my homework.
She has visited Paris.
They have seen this movie.

Negative:
Subject + have / has not + PP


Examples:
I have not (haven’t) finished my homework.
He has not (hasn’t) called me.

Interrogative (Questions):
Have / Has + subject + PP?


Examples:
Have you finished your work?
Has she arrived?

3- Uses

a) Experience (life experience)
without saying when


Examples:
I have been to Turkey.
She has tried sushi

b) Result (important now)
focus on result


Examples:
I have lost my keys. (I don’t have them now)
She has broken her phone.

c) Unfinished time (still continuing)

Examples:
I have studied today.
She has called me twice this morning.

d) Actions that started in the past and continue now
often with for / since


Examples:
I have lived here for 5 years.
She has worked here since 2020.

4- Time Expressions

already
just
yet
ever
never
for
since
today / this week / this month

Examples:
I have already finished.
Have you finished yet?
I have never seen this before.

5- Present Perfect vs Past Simple

Present Perfect → time NOT finished / not specific

Past Simple → finished time


Examples:
I have seen that movie.
I saw that movie yesterday.

6- Important Notes

Use PP (past participle) → done, gone, eaten, seen

Do NOT use with specific past time: yesterday, last year


I have seen him yesterday

I saw him yesterday

7- Common Mistakes

I have been knowing her

I have known her

She has went

She has gone
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Learn English easily and practically with Danesh's team through videos
What is the Present Perfect tense used for?
Do the quiz now and prove your understanding of the Present Perfect Tense.
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Learn English easily and practically with Danesh's team through videos
Unit 5 — At Work: Colleagues and Routines
21– repetitive (adjective) – the same thing is repeated every day
Example: Factory work can be repetitive.

22– knock off (phrasal verb, informal) – finish work
Example: I usually knock off at five o’clock.

23– night shift (noun) – working during the night
Example: He prefers the night shift because it’s quieter.

24– monotonous (adjective) – boring because it never changes
Example: Data entry can be monotonous.

25– satisfying (adjective) – makes you feel pleased by providing what you need
Example: It’s not a very satisfying job.

26– challenging (adjective) – tests your ability or determination
Example: I need a more challenging role.

27– glamorous (adjective) – very exciting and admired
Example: Being a pilot sounds glamorous.

28– anti-social hours (noun phrase) – hours that do not enable a normal social life
Example: Nurses often work anti-social hours.

29– long-haul flights (noun) – long-distance flights
Example: Long-haul flights can be exhausting.

30– mind-numbing (adjective) – extremely boring
Example: The journey was long and mind-numbing.

31– tight schedules (noun phrase) – very strict timetables
Example: We work to very tight schedules.

32– stuck in a rut (phrase) – stuck/trapped in a job you can’t escape from
Example: He feels stuck in a rut in his current job.

33– dead-end job (noun) – job with no prospects of promotion
Example: She left her dead-end job to find better opportunities.

34– technician (noun) – person whose job involves practical work with equipment
Example: He started off as a technician.

35– retrain (verb) – train again for a different job
Example: She retrained as a software developer.

36– go into partnership (verb phrase) – form a business with someone
Example: They went into partnership and started a company.

37– start-up (noun) – a small business that has just started
Example: The company began as a small start-up in 2009.

38– self-employed (adjective) – working for yourself
Example: She is self-employed and runs her own business.

39– freelance (adjective/adverb) – works for several companies when needed
Example: He works freelance as a computer programmer.

40– computer programmer (noun) – someone who writes computer programs
Example: A computer programmer develops software applications.
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