Unit 11: The bucket list
The present perfect with ‘ever’ and ‘never’
Select a unit
- 1Nice to meet you!
- 2What to wear
- 3Like this, like that
- 4The daily grind
- 5Christmas every day
- 6Great achievers
- 7The Titanic
- 8Travel
- 9The big wedding
- 10Sunny's job hunt
- 11The bucket list
- 12Moving and migration
- 13Welcome to BBC Broadcasting House
- 14New Year, New Project
- 15From Handel to Hendrix
- 16What's the weather like?
- 17The Digital Revolution
- 18A detective story
- 19A place to live
- 20The Cult of Celebrity
- 21Welcome to your new job
- 22Beyond the planets
- 23Great expectations!
- 24Eco-tourism
- 25Moving house
- 26It must be love
- 27Job hunting success... and failure
- 28Speeding into the future
- 29Lost arts
- 30Tales of survival
Session 2
We use the present perfect in several ways. In this session we explain how to form present perfect sentences so that we can talk about our experiences in the past.
ድምር ነጥቢ ናይዚ ክፍለ-ስራሓት 2
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Activity 2
Have you ever?
Asking questions
Soon we'll show you a great game you can play with your friends to help you practise present perfect questions – but first we need an explanation.
ነቲ ጽሑፍ ብምንባብ ነቲ ስራሕ ዕመምዎ

To do
Read the grammar explanation and then do the practice activity.
Grammar explanation
We often use the present perfect tense in questions about people’s life experiences.
Questions
Present perfect yes / no questions are made from have/has + subject + past participle + ?
‘Have you met the president?’ ‘Yes, I have.’
Present perfect question word questions are made from question word + have/has + subject + past participle + ?
How many times has she been to Tokyo?
Ever and never
We often use the present perfect with the words ever or never. Ever mean at any time in someone’s life. We usually use ever in questions.
‘Has he ever worked in China?’ ‘No, he hasn’t.’
Never means not at any time in someone’s life.
I’ve never seen the first Bond film.
Sometimes we ask questions with never. Often we do this to express surprise:
Have you never eaten a banana?
Practice
Now have a go at making present perfect questions. Have another look at the grammar explanation if you need help.
Making present perfect questions
10 Questions
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 1 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 2 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 3 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 4 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 5 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 6 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 7 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 8 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 9 of 10
ሓገዝ
Activity
Put these words into the correct order to make questions
ኣመት
Read the grammar notes againQuestion 10 of 10
Excellent!Great job!ሕማቕ ዕድል!ዘመዝገብኩምዎ ነጥቢ ...:
Next
How did you get on? On the next page you can see Sophie and Rob playing a game with some of these questions. Have a look – and then you can play the game with your friends too!
ናይ ስዋስው ክፍሊ
Grammar explanation
We often use the present perfect tense in questions about people’s life experiences.
Questions
Present perfect yes / no questions are made from have/has + subject + past participle + ?
‘Have you met the president?’ ‘Yes, I have.’
Present perfect question word questions are made from question word + have/has + subject + past participle + ?
How many times has she been to Tokyo?
Ever and never
We often use the present perfect with the words ever or never. Ever mean at any time in someone’s life. We usually use ever in questions.
‘Has he ever worked in China?’ ‘No, he hasn’t.’
Never means not at any time in someone’s life.
I’ve never seen the first Bond film.
Sometimes we ask questions with never. Often we do this to express surprise:
Have you never eaten a banana?