Past Perfect

20 min

Learning Goals

  • Form the past perfect correctly
  • Use it to show which action happened first
  • Understand when past perfect is necessary

Past Perfect

The past perfect describes an action that happened before another action in the past. It’s the “past of the past.”

Formation

Affirmative

had + past participle

SubjectHad + Past Participle
I / You / He / She / It / We / Theyhad worked

Examples:

  • I had finished before she arrived.
  • She had already left when I called.
  • They had never seen snow before.

Negative

had + not + past participle

  • I had not (hadn’t) finished.
  • She hadn’t eaten breakfast.
  • They hadn’t met before.

Questions

Had + subject + past participle?

  • Had you finished before she arrived?
  • Had she eaten?
  • What had they done?

When to Use Past Perfect

1. Action Before Another Past Action

To show which action happened first:

  • When I arrived, she had already left. (leaving happened first)
  • I didn’t recognize him because he had changed so much.
  • She told me she had seen the movie before.

Timeline:

Past Perfect (earlier) -----> Simple Past (later) -----> Now
   "had left"                    "arrived"

2. With Time Expressions

Before / After / When / By the time:

  • Before I went to bed, I had brushed my teeth.
  • After she had finished her work, she went home.
  • When I got there, the movie had started.
  • By the time we arrived, they had eaten everything.

Already / Just / Never / Ever:

  • I had already seen that film.
  • She had just left when you called.
  • I had never flown before that trip.
  • Had you ever been to Japan before?

3. Reported Speech

When reporting past statements:

  • Direct: “I have finished.”

  • Reported: She said she had finished.

  • Direct: “I saw him yesterday.”

  • Reported: She said she had seen him the day before.

4. Third Conditional

In if-clauses about unreal past situations:

  • If I had known, I would have helped.
  • She would have passed if she had studied more.

5. Wishes About the Past

  • I wish I had studied harder.
  • If only she had told me earlier.

Past Perfect vs. Simple Past

When Sequence Is Clear

If the order is obvious (by time expressions or logic), simple past is often enough:

  • I woke up, had breakfast, and left for work. (Order is clear from sequence)

  • After I woke up, I had breakfast. (Order is clear from “after”)

When Sequence Is Not Clear

Use past perfect to clarify which happened first:

  • When I arrived, she left. (She left at the moment I arrived)
  • When I arrived, she had left. (She left before I arrived)

Both Actions in Simple Past

For actions in sequence at approximately the same time:

  • I saw her and waved.
  • She opened the door and walked in.

Common Patterns

By the time + simple past, past perfect

  • By the time I got home, everyone had gone to bed.
  • By the time she arrived, we had finished eating.

When + simple past, past perfect

  • When I called, she had already left.
  • When they got married, they had known each other for 10 years.

After + past perfect, simple past

  • After she had eaten, she felt better.
  • After I had read the book, I watched the movie.

Before + simple past, past perfect

  • Before I went out, I had checked the weather.
  • The train had left before we reached the station.

Practice

Choose the correct form:

  1. “When I arrived at the cinema, the film ___ (already/start).” → The film had already started.

  2. “I ___ (never/eat) sushi before I went to Japan.” → I had never eaten sushi before I went to Japan.

  3. “She told me she ___ (lose) her phone.” → She told me she had lost her phone.

  4. “After he ___ (finish) his homework, he watched TV.” → After he had finished his homework, he watched TV.

Verb Tenses Essentials
7 of 12 lessons