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1._____ to Rome?

 a. Have ever you been


 b. Have you ever been correct
 c. Have you been ever

➪ In questions, we use ever after have and before the subject.


2 . Have you had lunch _____?

 a. yet correct
 b. just
 c. already

➪ We use yet in and sentences. We put it at the end of the sentence.


3.I _____ the keys that I lost yet.

 a. haven't find
 b. haven't finded
 c. haven't found correct

➪ Find is an irregular verb: find, found, found. We make the present perfect tense
with the verb have and the past participle of the verb. The past participle is the same as
the past simple (-ed) for regular verbs. For irregular verbs, it’s the form in the 3rd
column.
4I _____ Peter since I was 5 years old.

 a. know
 b. 've known correct
 c. 've knew

➪ We use present perfect, and not present simple for actions or situations that started in
the past and are still true now.
5I _____ my pen. Can I use yours?

 a. 've losed
 b. lose
 c. have lost correct

➪ We make the present perfect tense with the verb have and the past participle of the
verb. Lose is an irregular verb, and the past participle is lost.
6A: 'Where's Celine?' B: 'She ______.'

 a. 's just left correct ( She has just left)


 b. just has left
 c. has left just

➪ The words just and already go after the verb have and before the main verb.
7.I've been here _____.
 a. since a week ago
 b. since a week
 c. for a week correct

➪ We use for + a period of time, e.g. for two weeks, for ten years, for ten days, for a
few hours, etc. And we don’t use the word ago with the present perfect.

8.We _____ insects before.

 a. never have ate


 b. 've never eaten correct
 c. never have eaten wrong

➪ Eat is an irregular verb, and eaten is the past participle. To make the present perfect,
we need the verb have + the past participle eaten. And the word never goes after the
verb have and before the main verb.

9.We've known each other since we _____ children.

 a. were correct
 b. have been c. are

➪ We use since + a moment in the past (the beginning of a period of time), e.g. since I
was born, since 10 o’clock, since last Wednesday, etc. That means that if we use a
clause after since, the verb is usually in past tense.
10_____ raining yet?

 a. Has it stop
 b. Does it stopped
 c. Has it stopped correct

➪ We often use the present perfect with yet. And for questions the present perfect
is: have + subject + past participle of the main verb.

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