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All Tenses in English Grammar

Complete English Tense Guide – Class 6 to 12 | CBSE, ICSE & UP Board | Since, For, Before & After Rules
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English Grammar Β· Class 6–12 Β· UP Board

The Only Tense Guide Your Students Will Ever Need

Complete English Tense Notes help students learn all 12 tenses with easy rules, formulas, charts, and examples. All 12 tenses Β· Since vs For rules Β· Before & After rules Β· Hindi recognition cues Β· Common mistake fixes β€” structured for CBSE, ICSE & UP Board Class 6 to 12.

Reading time: 10 min Level: Class 6 β†’ 12 Exam relevance: CBSE Β· ICSE Β· UP Board Β· Competitive

If you get tenses wrong, every sentence you write is wrong. It doesn't matter how rich your vocabulary is β€” tense is the engine of English grammar.

Ask any student from Class 6 to Class 12 what the hardest part of English grammar is, and the answer is almost always the same: tenses. Too many rules, too many exceptions, too many verb forms to memorize.

But here's the truth that experienced teachers know β€” tense is not complicated. It's just poorly taught. This guide fixes that. You'll find all 12 tenses with clean formulas, Hindi cues, the Since vs For rule fully explained, the Before and After rule with examples, common mistake fixes, and study strategies that actually work.


Grammar study books

12 Tenses. One Complete Guide.

Everything a Class 6–12 student needs β€” formulas, Hindi cues, examples, and exam tricks.

All Four Present Tenses

Present Simple Present
Subject + V1(s/es) + Object
She goes to school every day.
The sun rises in the east.

Hindi: ΰ€€ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ / ΰ€€ΰ₯€ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ / ΰ€€ΰ₯‡ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆΰ€‚ Β· Use: Habits, routines, universal truths

Present Present Continuous
Subject + is/am/are + V1+ing + Object
I am reading a book right now.
They are playing cricket.

Hindi: ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ / ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ₯€ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ / ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ₯‡ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆΰ€‚ Β· Use: Action happening at this moment

Present Present Perfect
Subject + has/have + V3 + Object
I have completed my homework.
She has eaten food.

Hindi: ΰ€šΰ₯ΰ€•ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ / ΰ€²ΰ€Ώΰ€―ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ Β· Use: Recently completed action

Present Present Perfect Continuous
Subject + has/have + been + V1+ing + since/for
I have been studying for two hours.
She has been working since morning.

Hindi: ΰ€Έΰ₯‡ ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ / ΰ€Έΰ₯‡ ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ₯€ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ Β· Use: Started in past, still ongoing


Writing grammar notes
Past Tenses
Future planning study
Future Tenses

All Four Past Tenses

Past Simple Past
Subject + V2 + Object
I visited Delhi last summer.
She wrote a letter.

Hindi: ΰ€₯ΰ€Ύ / ΰ€₯ΰ₯€ / ΰ€₯ΰ₯‡ Β· Use: Completed action at a specific time

Past Past Continuous
Subject + was/were + V1+ing + Object
I was playing cricket at 5 PM.
They were watching TV.

Hindi: ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€₯ΰ€Ύ / ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ₯€ ΰ€₯ΰ₯€ Β· Use: Ongoing action at a past point in time

Past Past Perfect
Subject + had + V3 + Object
She had completed the work before noon.
I had eaten food before he arrived.

Hindi: ΰ€šΰ₯ΰ€•ΰ€Ύ ΰ€₯ΰ€Ύ / ΰ€šΰ₯ΰ€•ΰ₯€ ΰ€₯ΰ₯€ Β· Use: Action completed before another past action

Past Past Perfect Continuous
Subject + had + been + V1+ing + since/for
He had been studying for three hours.
They had been working since morning.

Hindi: ΰ€Έΰ₯‡ ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€₯ΰ€Ύ Β· Use: Action going on for a period before another past event


All Four Future Tenses

Future Simple Future
Subject + will/shall + V1 + Object
I will go to school tomorrow.
She will help you.

Hindi: ΰ€—ΰ€Ύ / ΰ€—ΰ₯€ / ΰ€—ΰ₯‡ Β· Use: Action that will happen in future

Future Future Continuous
Subject + will be + V1+ing + Object
I will be studying at 9 PM tonight.
They will be playing cricket tomorrow.

Hindi: ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯‹ΰ€—ΰ€Ύ / ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ₯€ ΰ€Ήΰ₯‹ΰ€—ΰ₯€ Β· Use: Ongoing action at a future point in time

Future Future Perfect
Subject + will have + V3 + Object
She will have completed the project by Friday.
I will have reached home by 8 PM.

Hindi: ΰ€šΰ₯ΰ€•ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯‹ΰ€—ΰ€Ύ / ΰ€šΰ₯ΰ€•ΰ₯€ ΰ€Ήΰ₯‹ΰ€—ΰ₯€ Β· Use: Action completed before a future point

Future Future Perfect Continuous
Subject + will have been + V1+ing + since/for
He will have been studying for 6 hours by then.
They will have been working since morning.

Hindi: ΰ€Έΰ₯‡ ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯‹ΰ€—ΰ€Ύ Β· Use: Ongoing action up to a future moment


Master Formula Chart β€” All 12 Tenses

TenseFormulaExample
Simple PresentS + V1(s/es)She sings.
Present ContinuousS + is/am/are + V1+ingShe is singing.
Present PerfectS + has/have + V3She has sung.
Present Perfect Cont.S + has/have + been + V1+ingShe has been singing for an hour.
Simple PastS + V2She sang.
Past ContinuousS + was/were + V1+ingShe was singing.
Past PerfectS + had + V3She had sung.
Past Perfect Cont.S + had + been + V1+ingShe had been singing for hours.
Simple FutureS + will + V1She will sing.
Future ContinuousS + will be + V1+ingShe will be singing tomorrow.
Future PerfectS + will have + V3She will have sung.
Future Perfect Cont.S + will have been + V1+ingShe will have been singing since noon.

UP Board English Grammar β€” Tense Guide for Class 9, 10, 11 & 12

UP Board (Uttar Pradesh Madhyamik Shiksha Parishad) students studying under the UP Board Hindi Medium or English Medium syllabus will find tense questions appear directly in grammar sections, translation exercises, and essay writing. Here is exactly what UP Board students need to focus on.

UP Board Exam Pattern β€” Tense Questions

Class 9 & 10

Simple Present, Simple Past, Simple Future, Present & Past Continuous β€” most heavily tested in UP Board Class 10 English paper.

Class 11 & 12

Present Perfect, Past Perfect, Future Perfect, all Continuous forms β€” UP Board Class 12 English paper includes advanced tense transformation questions.

Translation

UP Board has Hindi-to-English translation β€” knowing Hindi cues (ΰ€€ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ, ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€₯ΰ€Ύ, ΰ€šΰ₯ΰ€•ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ) is the fastest way to identify the correct tense.

UP Board Most-Tested Tenses β€” Class-wise Breakdown

ClassMost Tested TensesExam Question TypeMarks
Class 9Simple Present, Simple Past, Present ContinuousFill in the blanks, error correction5–8 marks
Class 10Simple Present, Simple Past, Simple Future, Past ContinuousTranslation, sentence rewriting, gap filling8–12 marks
Class 11Present Perfect, Past Perfect, Future ContinuousSentence transformation, translation8–10 marks
Class 12All 12 tenses + Since/For + Before/AfterTranslation, grammar correction, essay writing10–15 marks

UP Board Exam Trick (Hindi Medium Students): In Hindi-to-English translation questions, first identify the Hindi verb ending β€” "ΰ€€ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ" = Simple Present, "ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€₯ΰ€Ύ" = Past Continuous, "ΰ€šΰ₯ΰ€•ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ" = Present Perfect, "ΰ€—ΰ€Ύ/ΰ€—ΰ₯€/ΰ€—ΰ₯‡" = Simple Future. The Hindi cue tells you exactly which English tense formula to apply.

UP Board Common Question Formats with Examples

Q Type 1 Fill in the blank: She ___ (go) to school every day. β†’ goes (Simple Present)
Q Type 2 Translate: ΰ€΅ΰ€Ή ΰ€Έΰ₯ΰ€¬ΰ€Ή ΰ€Έΰ₯‡ ΰ€ͺΰ€’ΰ€Ό ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ₯€ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆΰ₯€ β†’ She has been studying since morning. (Present Perfect Continuous)
Q Type 3 Correct the sentence: He had went to market before she arrived. β†’ He had gone to market before she arrived.

Since vs For β€” The Rule Every Student Gets Wrong

Both "since" and "for" are used with Perfect and Perfect Continuous tenses to express duration. But they are NOT interchangeable. This is one of the most tested grammar points in CBSE, ICSE, UP Board and competitive exams.

Clock time concept

Since = A Point in Time  Β·  For = A Duration

One of the most frequently tested rules in CBSE, ICSE & UP Board grammar sections.

Since

Since

Refers to a specific starting point in time β€” a moment, date, day, year, or event.

  • I have been studying since 8 AM.
  • She has lived here since 2018.
  • He has not eaten since morning.
  • We have been friends since childhood.
  • It has been raining since Monday.
For

For

Refers to a duration or period of time β€” how long something has been going on.

  • I have been studying for two hours.
  • She has lived here for five years.
  • He has not eaten for many hours.
  • We have been friends for a long time.
  • It has been raining for three days.

The Rule: When to use SINCE

Use since when you can point to the exact moment the action started. Ask yourself: "Can I name a specific time or event?" If yes β†’ use since.

since Monday since 2020 since morning since last year since childhood since he left since January since birth since yesterday since the accident

The Rule: When to use FOR

Use for when you describe how long the action has lasted, using a number or quantity. Ask yourself: "How long has this been going on?" If the answer is a span β†’ use for.

for two hours for five years for a long time for many days for three months for ages for a week for decades for some time for six days

Exam Trick: If you can answer "Since when?" β†’ use since. If you can answer "For how long?" β†’ use for. This question test never fails.

WrongShe has been working for morning. (morning is a point, not a duration)
RightShe has been working since morning.
WrongHe has been studying since three hours. (three hours is a duration, not a point)
RightHe has been studying for three hours.

Which Tenses Use Since and For?

TenseSinceForExample
Present Perfectβœ” Yesβœ” YesI have lived here for 5 years / since 2019.
Present Perfect Cont.βœ” Yesβœ” YesShe has been singing for an hour / since noon.
Past Perfectβœ” Yesβœ” YesHe had waited for two hours / since 9 AM.
Past Perfect Cont.βœ” Yesβœ” YesThey had been running for miles / since dawn.
Future Perfect Cont.βœ” Yesβœ” YesHe will have been working for 8 hours / since morning.
Simple Present / Past / Futureβœ– Avoidβœ– AvoidSince/For don't fit simple tense constructions.

Before & After Rules β€” The Tense Sequence That Confuses Everyone

When a sentence contains two actions in the past and uses the words before or after, students consistently use the wrong tense for one of the actions. Here is the complete rule, explained clearly.

Timeline sequence

The key principle: when two past actions happen one before the other, the earlier action uses Past Perfect (had + V3) and the later action uses Simple Past (V2). The conjunctions "before" and "after" control how you apply this.

Rule: Using BEFORE
Earlier Action (Past Perfect) + before + Later Action (Simple Past)

The action that is mentioned first in the sentence happened first in real life too. The clause after "before" is the second (later) action β€” use Simple Past there.

She had eaten food before he arrived.
I had finished my work before she called me.
He had left the house before it started raining.
They had completed the project before the deadline arrived.
Rule: Using AFTER
Later Action (Simple Past) + after + Earlier Action (Past Perfect)

When "after" is used, the clause after "after" is the earlier action β€” use Past Perfect there. The main clause (the result) uses Simple Past.

He went to sleep after he had finished studying.
She left after she had cooked the food.
I called him after I had reached home.
They relaxed after they had submitted the assignment.

Before vs After β€” Side-by-Side Examples

Using BEFORE

She had studied before she went to sleep.
β†’ Studying happened first.

He had eaten before the guests arrived.
β†’ Eating happened first.

I had locked the door before I left.
β†’ Locking happened first.

Using AFTER

She went to sleep after she had studied.
β†’ Studying happened first.

The guests arrived after he had eaten.
β†’ Eating happened first.

I left after I had locked the door.
β†’ Locking happened first.

Memory Trick: Think of "had + V3" as a flag that says "this happened earlier." Whichever action happened first in real life gets "had + V3" β€” regardless of where it appears in the sentence.

Common Before/After Mistakes

WrongShe ate food before he arrived. (no Past Perfect β€” sequence unclear)
RightShe had eaten food before he arrived. (earlier action = Past Perfect)
WrongHe went to sleep after he finished studying. (both Simple Past β€” sequence unclear)
RightHe went to sleep after he had finished studying. (earlier action = Past Perfect)
WrongI had left after she had called. (both Past Perfect β€” redundant)
RightI left after she had called. (later action = Simple Past)

Before & After with Future Tense

When the sentence talks about the future, the rule changes slightly. After the conjunctions "before" and "after," use Simple Present β€” never "will."

WrongI will call you before I will leave. (never use "will" after "before")
RightI will call you before I leave.
WrongShe will rest after she will finish her work.
RightShe will rest after she finishes her work.
ConjunctionEarlier ActionLater ActionExample
Before (Past)Past Perfect (had+V3)Simple Past (V2)She had left before he arrived.
After (Past)Past Perfect (had+V3)Simple Past (V2)He slept after she had left.
Before (Future)Simple Future (will+V1)Simple Present (V1)I will call before I leave.
After (Future)Simple Future (will+V1)Simple Present (V1)She will eat after she finishes.

6 Mistakes Students Make β€” and How to Fix Them

WrongHe do not play cricket.
RightHe does not play cricket. β€” Use "does" with third-person singular (he/she/it).
WrongI am go to school.
RightI am going to school. β€” After is/am/are, always use V1+ing.
WrongShe have completed the work.
RightShe has completed the work. β€” Use "has" with he/she/it in Present Perfect.
WrongHe does not goes to school.
RightHe does not go to school. β€” Always use V1 (base form) after a helping verb.
WrongI have went to the market.
RightI have gone to the market. β€” Present Perfect always needs V3, not V2.
WrongShe has been studying since two hours.
RightShe has been studying for two hours. β€” "Two hours" is a duration β†’ use "for."

Students learning together
Students who practice tenses daily score significantly higher in board exams.

6 Study Strategies That Actually Work

  • Learn helping verbs first. is/am/are, was/were, has/have, had, will β€” these are the skeleton of every tense formula.
  • Use Hindi cues. Words like "ΰ€€ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ", "ΰ€°ΰ€Ήΰ€Ύ ΰ€₯ΰ€Ύ", and "ΰ€šΰ₯ΰ€•ΰ€Ύ ΰ€Ήΰ₯ˆ" tell you which tense to use instantly before you even write in English.
  • Write 5 sentences daily per tense. Reading formulas is passive. Writing sentences is active. The difference in exam performance is enormous.
  • Master the Since/For test. Ask "Since when?" or "For how long?" β€” the answer tells you exactly which word to use. Practice this until it becomes automatic.
  • Memorize the Before/After rule with one sentence. "The action that happened FIRST gets had + V3." Repeat that 10 times. It covers 80% of Past Perfect exam questions.
  • Practice negative and question forms. Most students can write affirmatives. Exams test negatives and interrogatives heavily β€” do not skip them.

Questions Students Ask Most

What is the difference between Simple Past and Present Perfect?

Simple Past is used when the action is completely finished and a specific time is stated β€” "I ate at 8 PM." Present Perfect is used when the action is complete but the exact time is not given or is still relevant β€” "I have eaten." In CBSE, ICSE and UP Board exams, this difference is tested directly.

Can "since" be used without a Perfect tense?

No. "Since" (when indicating time duration) always requires a Perfect or Perfect Continuous tense β€” Present Perfect, Past Perfect, or their continuous forms. Using "since" with Simple Past or Simple Present is a grammatical error in standard English.

Is it always necessary to use Past Perfect with "before" and "after"?

In most exam contexts and formal writing, yes. The Past Perfect makes the sequence of events unambiguous. However, when the sequence is already very clear from context, some informal sentences use Simple Past for both clauses. For exams, always use the Past Perfect for the earlier action.

Why can we not use "will" after "before" and "after" in future sentences?

In English, time conjunctions like "before," "after," "when," "until," and "as soon as" take Simple Present β€” not "will" β€” even when the sentence refers to the future. This is a fixed rule. The main clause carries the "will" to indicate futurity; the subordinate clause after the conjunction uses Simple Present.

How many tenses are most important for Class 10 and 12 board exams?

All 12 are in the curriculum, but Simple Present, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Perfect, and Simple Future are tested most frequently. The Since/For rule and Before/After rule appear in error correction, gap-filling, and sentence transformation exercises across CBSE Class 10 and 12, ICSE, and UP Board Hindi Medium and English Medium papers.

Grammar practice
Practice Daily
Exam success
Ace Your Exams

Ready to Test Yourself?

The best way to master tenses is to write them out daily. Practice Since/For sentences and Before/After sequences every day for two weeks β€” you will see a measurable improvement in your exam scores.

Download Practice Worksheet β†’

Complete English Grammar Guide Β· Tense Β· Since & For Β· Before & After Β· CBSE Β· ICSE Β· UP Board Β· Class 6 to 12

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