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Jordana Brewster

Jordana Brewster was born in Panama


City, Panama, on April 26, 1980, the
older of two daughters. Her mother,
Maria João is a former swimsuit model
from Brazil, and her father, Alden
Brewster, is an American investment
banker. She left Brazil at the age of 10,
settling in Manhattan, New York City,
where she studied at the Convent of the
Sacred Heart and graduated from the
Professional Children's School.
Brewster graduated from Yale
University with a B. A. in English in 2003. In 2002, Stuff magazine named her
the 96th hottest woman in their "102 Sexiest Women in the World". In 2005,
Maxim magazine named her the 54th sexiest woman in the world in their
annual Hot 100, while in 2006, Maxim placed her at No.59. In 2009, she was
ranked No.9 on Maxim's Hot 100 and to coincide with the release of Fast and
Furious, a photographic spread of Brewster in a range of black lingerie in their
May 2009 edition ("Life in the Fast Lane"). In 2011, Maxim placed Brewster
at No.11 in their Hot 100.
In June 2016, the Human Rights Campaign released a video in tribute to the
victims of the Orlando nightclub shooting; in the video, Brewster and others
told the stories of the people killed there.

1. What is the present perfect?


The present perfect is a verb tense in which it narrates events that have already occurred at
a specific moment or in the past but that continue to have relevance in the present.

2. How is it used? Why for?


Present perfect or present perfect is a verb tense that we use to talk about something that
happened in the past but has relevance in the present, either because it happened very
recently or because it is an action that has not yet finished.
3. What does it indicate?
To form the present perfect, the auxiliary verb "to have" is used in the present and the past
participle of the verb.
To form the present perfect, the auxiliary verb "to have" is used in the present and the past
participle of the verb.

4. What is its structure?


Structure. In present perfect the auxiliary verbs are "has" and "have". The first is used for
she, he or it, and the second for I, we, they and you.
1- Affirmation → subject + has / have + verb in past participle.

5. What are the most common words used with this tense?
Have worked/has worked
Have walked/has walked
Have lived/has lived
Have called/has called
Have waited/has waited
Have looked/has looked
Have played/has played

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