We have not watched. He/She/It has not watched. You have not watched. They have not watched.
'Watched' is used in the case of Past Perfect Tense or Present Perfect Tense.
I had not read. You had not read. We had not read. He/She/It had not read.
Past perfect simple: form
We use had + the -ed form of the verb. worked. worked.
We use the past perfect simple (had + past participle) to talk about time up to a certain point in the past. She'd published her first poem by the time she was eight. We'd finished all the water before we were halfway up the mountain. Had the parcel arrived when you called yesterday?
I have not paid. You have not paid. We have not paid. He/She/It has not paid.
To use the present perfect tense in the negative, simply add the negative word (like not or never) after the auxiliary verb but before the past participle. I have not slept well since exams started. My Midwestern friend has never seen the ocean.
Negative Sentences in the Present Perfect Simple Tense
When speaking, put the stress on 'not'. I haven't eaten at that restaurant in a long time. Jim hasn't worked on Fridays since he joined the company. My friends haven't ever gone to France.
The clock has just struck twelve. We have gone for a walk. I have done all my homework. I have been in Pune for one week.
Verbs can appear in any one of three perfect tenses: present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect.
Since the perfect tenses always use the past participle, the correct choice is eaten, as in I have eaten too much (not I have ate too much). For example: Present perfect: I have eaten at this restaurant. Past perfect: I had eaten at this restaurant twice before tonight.
The past perfect, also called the pluperfect, is a verb tense used to talk about something that happened before something else that is also in the past.
The present perfect is formed using the present tense of the verb "to have" and the past participle of the main verb. The past perfect tense says that an action was completed at a time before another action happened in the past.
The past tense of 'read' is 'read' that is same in spelling but it is pronounced 'red'.
The Past Perfect tense in English is composed of two parts: the past tense of the verb to have (had) + the past participle of the main verb.
The English perfect tenses (present perfect, present perfect progressive/continuous, past perfect, past perfect progressive/continuous, future perfect, & future perfect progressive/continuous) are all used to make connections in time.
A nonpast tense (abbreviated NPST) is a grammatical tense that distinguishes a verbal action as taking place in times present or future, as opposed to past tense.
both past tense and past participle of empty are emptied.
Past tense (perfect)
It is used to describe an action in the past which is completed. To describe a past action or state which is incomplete, we use an imperfect tense. This tense indicates an action which has gone on over a period time or has happened frequently.
We use when + past perfect to talk about an action that happened immediately before something else … When we'd done the washing-up, we watched TV. (We did the washing-up, and then we watched TV.)