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[Notes: This is something I designed when I was working in teacher training to help new teachers get their heads around the tense, aspect and voice system. It could also be used for students.]
Notes:
* Not all verbs have a passive voice. Only verbs which have direct objects can be put in the passive. For example, “I eat pizza” has a passive equivalent, but not “I sleep” or “I walk”
* Some linguists argue that English has no future tense, because the so-called “future simple” does not have its own verb form, but rather “modal verb + base form”. However the terminology differs from one grammar book to another, and some grammar books do refer to a future tense.
* Some of these verb structures, while technically possible, are extremely rare. For example, a native speaker is unlikely to ever use the present perfect continuous passive (“has been being eaten”). However, all the forms are included in this table to help illustrate the patterns of inflection.
* Infinitive structures are not considered tenses because they exist outside of time. (Hence the name infinitive, meaning non-finite). For example, notice how the infinitive structure does not change in these sentences even though the time reference does:
He wants to eat pizza.
He wanted to eat pizza.
He will want to eat pizza.
* Aspects can also be put into the infinitive. For example, someone once said to a friend of mine, “You don’t want to travel, you want to have travelled.” Meaning, she wanted to have travel stories to tell at dinner parties, but she didn’t enjoy the experience of actually travelling itself.
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