Let's look at the sentence "Present Perfect — Complete Guide with Examples" and understand why it matters. Good grammar isn't about memorising rules — it's about understanding patterns. Here's a calm, clear breakdown.
See the step-by-step solution above for the complete answer.
Step 1: The error: "I have went there."
Step 2: Rule: Use past participle after 'have': go → gone.
Step 3: Correct: "I have gone there."
Step 4: The error: "I have went there."
Step 5: Rule: Use past participle after 'have': go → gone.
Step 6: Correct: "I have gone there."
Step 7: The error: "She has ate lunch."
Step 8: Rule: Eat → eaten (past participle).
Step 9: Correct: "She has eaten lunch."
Step 10: The error: "They has finished."
Step 11: Rule: Use 'have' with plural subjects.
Step 12: Correct: "They have finished."
Step 13: The error: "He have been there."
Step 14: Rule: Use 'has' with third person singular.
Step 15: Correct: "He has been there."
Step 16: The error: "I have wrote a letter."
Step 17: Rule: Write → written (past participle).
Step 18: Correct: "I have written a letter."
Step 19: The error: "I have went there."
Step 20: Rule: Use past participle after 'have': go → gone.
Step 21: Correct: "I have gone there."
Step 22: The error: "She has ate lunch."
Step 23: Rule: Eat → eaten (past participle).
Step 24: Correct: "She has eaten lunch."
Step 25: The error: "They has finished."
Step 26: Rule: Use 'have' with plural subjects.
Step 27: Correct: "They have finished."
Step 28: The error: "He have been there."
Step 29: Rule: Use 'has' with third person singular.
Step 30: Correct: "He has been there."
Step 31: The error: "I have wrote a letter."
Step 32: Rule: Write → written (past participle).
Step 33: Correct: "I have written a letter."
Step 34: The error: "I have went there."
Step 35: Rule: Use past participle after 'have': go → gone.
Step 36: Correct: "I have gone there."
Step 37: The error: "She has ate lunch."
Step 38: Rule: Eat → eaten (past participle).
Step 39: Correct: "She has eaten lunch."
Step 40: The error: "They has finished."
Step 41: Rule: Use 'have' with plural subjects.
Step 42: Correct: "They have finished."
Step 43: The error: "He have been there."
Step 44: Rule: Use 'has' with third person singular.
Step 45: Correct: "He has been there."
Step 46: The error: "I have wrote a letter."
Step 47: Rule: Write → written (past participle).
Step 48: Correct: "I have written a letter."
Step 49: The error: "I have went there."
Step 50: Rule: Use past participle after 'have': go → gone.
Step 51: Correct: "I have gone there."
Step 52: The error: "She has ate lunch."
Step 53: Rule: Eat → eaten (past participle).
Step 54: Correct: "She has eaten lunch."
Step 55: The error: "They has finished."
Step 56: Rule: Use 'have' with plural subjects.
Step 57: Correct: "They have finished."
Step 58: The error: "He have been there."
Step 59: Rule: Use 'has' with third person singular.
Step 60: Correct: "He has been there."
Step 61: The error: "I have wrote a letter."
Step 62: Rule: Write → written (past participle).
Step 63: Correct: "I have written a letter."
This exercise tests your understanding of present perfect. The rule helps you form grammatically correct sentences that sound natural to native speakers.
❌ Mistake 1: Confusing similar grammar rules that apply in different contexts.
❌ Mistake 2: Applying the rule inconsistently across similar sentence structures.
❌ Mistake 3: Overlooking exceptions to the general rule.
See the step-by-step solution above for the complete answer.
This exercise tests your understanding of present perfect. The rule helps you form grammatically correct sentences that sound natural to native speakers.