check out your Appointments Here:  My Appointments

Back
0

Shopping cart

Close

No products in the cart.

Tags:

Share:

Past Perfect Tense in English — B2 Grammar Tutorial with Interactive Exercises & Quiz

Master the Past Perfect Tense with this ultra-interactive B2-level grammar tutorial. Learn step-by-step with real-life examples, instant-feedback exercises, and a 30-question randomized quiz. Perfect for IELTS, TOEFL, and advanced English learners, this lesson explains when and how to use the Past Perfect to describe actions before a past event. Includes practice tasks, detailed explanations, and instant answer keys to boost your accuracy and confidence. - Past Perfect Tense in English — B2 Grammar Tutorial with Interactive Exercises & Quiz - LingExam Language Academy - Lingexam.com

Past Perfect Tense — B2 Tutorial | LingExam

Past Perfect Tense — B2 Mastery (LingExam | Clear Rules • Real Context • Smart Practice)

Goal: Use the Past Perfect to show which past action happened first before another past moment/action. You’ll learn form, timelines, signal words, negatives, questions, and typical exam uses (stories, reports, and conditional sentences).

Story Context (Read First)

Emma arrived at the airport at 6 a.m., but the flight had already left. She felt disappointed because she had booked the ticket weeks ago. She had set her alarm, but somehow she had turned it off in her sleep. By the time she woke up, the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes. Her passport and bag were ready, but it didn’t matter. If she had arrived just ten minutes earlier, she would have caught the flight. She called her friend and explained everything. She had never missed a flight before. Her friend suggested rescheduling it. She promised herself she would be more careful next time.

13 Pro Steps to Control the Past Perfect

1
Form = had + V3. It’s the same for all subjects: I/you/she/we/they had left. Negative: had not (hadn’t) + V3. Question: Had + subject + V3? Keep the auxiliary had even in short answers: “Had she booked it?Yes, she had.
2
Meaning: marks the earlier past before another past time. In Emma’s story, the flight had already left before 6 a.m. We use Past Perfect to organise the sequence clearly and avoid confusion.
3
Pairing: Past Perfect (+ earlier action) often comes with Simple Past (+ later action): By 6 a.m. the plane had left (earlier); Emma arrived (later).
4
Signals: already, just, by the time, before, after, until, never, ever. These often point to an earlier completed action: By the time she woke up, the taxi had been waiting 15 minutes.
5
Narratives: Use Past Perfect to set background conditions before the main event: She had set her alarm, but she had turned it off. This keeps the timeline clean for readers.
6
Continuous: had been + V-ing shows duration before a later past point: The taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes (before she came). Choose this when how long matters.
7
Negatives: hadn’t + V3: She hadn’t realised the time. For emphasis, place adverbs between had and V3: She had never missed a flight before.
8
Questions: Had she booked the ticket?Yes, she had. Avoid double auxiliaries (✗ Did she had…). Use short answers to keep style natural at B2 level.
9
Conditionals: If + Past Perfectwould have + V3: If she had arrived earlier, she would have caught the flight. Useful for regrets and imagining different outcomes.
10
Reported speech: When reporting a past-before-past action: She said she had booked the ticket weeks ago. This keeps the original sequence clear.
11
Mistakes: (1) Using Past Perfect with no later past reference; (2) Mixing with did + V3; (3) Overusing it when Simple Past is enough. Ask: “Do I need to show one past happened before another?”
12
Not needed if the order is obvious or if only one past action exists: She arrived at 6 a.m. (no earlier action to mark).
13
Timeline trick: Write the later past first (Simple Past), then step back (Past Perfect) for the earlier action. This structure reads smoothly in stories and reports.

Quick Fill-in Template (Click to Copy)

[Later past action — Simple Past]
[At/Later time], [subject] [Simple Past]

[Earlier past action — Past Perfect]
Before that / By the time / Already, [subject] had + V3

[Optional duration/background]
[subject] had been + V-ing for [time]

[Conditional regret]
If [subject] had + V3, [subject] would have + V3.
Tip: Draft the later past first, then step back for the earlier action. Keep one Past Perfect per earlier event to avoid clutter.

Micro-Practice Prompts

By the time the meeting started, I ______ (finish) my slides.

• She was shocked because she ______ never ______ (see) snow before.

• If they ______ (leave) earlier, they ______ (catch) the bus.

Part 2 — Exercise 1 (MCQ)

Choose the best answer. As soon as you select an option, the correct answer and a detailed explanation will appear below the question.

1
By the time Emma reached the gate, the plane ______.
Correct answer: B — had already left

We use the Past Perfect (had + V3) to show an action that happened before another past moment. The later past moment here is “Emma reached the gate,” which is in Simple Past. Therefore, the plane’s departure must be expressed with Past Perfect to mark it as earlier. Option A uses a bare past form without the auxiliary “had,” which fails to signal the earlier past clearly. Option C is Present Perfect and connects the past to the present; that logic does not fit a narrative sequence anchored in the past. Option D suggests an ongoing process (had been leaving), which is odd for a punctual event like a plane’s departure. The adverb “already” is a common signal with Past Perfect but can also appear with other tenses; what matters most is the timeline relation. In narratives, Past Perfect is especially helpful when readers might otherwise misread the order of events. This sentence mirrors Emma’s story, where the flight had left before she arrived. Using Past Perfect prevents ambiguity and keeps the chronology precise. In reports and stories, combine Past Perfect (earlier) with Simple Past (later) to structure the sequence. Always check: do you need to show that one past happened before another? If yes, Past Perfect is the right tool.

2
Which sentence uses the Past Perfect appropriately for sequence?
Correct answer: C — had set … had turned

In a narrative about Emma’s missed flight, both “setting the alarm” and “turning it off” occurred before the later past moment when she woke up late. Past Perfect fits because these actions form the background to the later events. Option A uses Simple Past for both actions; this could work if the timeline is already clear, but it does not highlight the earlier-before-later relation. Option B mixes Present Perfect and Simple Past, which typically produces an inconsistent timeline in a fully past narrative. Option D incorrectly adds “now,” a present-time adverb, which clashes with any past-tense framework. With background chains, writers often use Past Perfect for both steps to keep the earlier layer consistent. However, overusing Past Perfect can feel heavy; once the sequence is clear, you can return to Simple Past. The key is whether the reader needs help understanding what happened first. Because Emma’s case hinges on earlier mistakes causing later consequences, Past Perfect is ideal. Use it to set conditions that explain outcomes. Then switch back to Simple Past for the main storyline.

3
Choose the best sentence to express duration before a later past moment.
Correct answer: D — had been waiting

The Past Perfect Continuous (had been + V-ing) expresses a situation that started earlier and continued up to a later past reference. Here, the later reference is “when she woke up.” Option D shows duration and continuity, matching Emma’s story precisely. Option A uses Simple Past and loses the sense of an ongoing wait leading up to her waking. Option B uses Present Perfect Continuous with a past-time anchor, which creates a tense clash. Option C mixes Past Perfect with a present-time subordinate clause (“she wakes up”), causing inconsistency. Use the continuous form when “how long” or “since when” is central to meaning. This form is common for queues, delays, and any background action that was in progress before another event. It’s particularly helpful when you want readers to feel the ongoing state that explains an outcome. In Emma’s case, the taxi had been waiting, which underscores the accumulated delay. That build-up makes the later failure (missing the flight) more believable. Always align both clauses in the past to keep the timeline clean.

4
Complete the 3rd Conditional: If Emma ______ ten minutes earlier, she ______ the flight.
Correct answer: A — had arrived / would have caught

The 3rd Conditional imagines a different outcome in the past: If + Past Perfectwould have + V3. Option A follows that exact structure, matching Emma’s hypothetical. Option B is a 2nd Conditional pattern and suggests a present-time unreal situation, which is not intended here. Option C uses a 1st Conditional pattern for real future possibilities, which again does not fit a completed past scenario. Option D combines Past Perfect Continuous with a 2nd Conditional result, which is mismatched and awkward. In regrets and missed opportunities, the Past Perfect in the if-clause marks the earlier, unrealized condition. The result clause shows the unreal past outcome with “would have + past participle.” This pattern also helps exam takers clearly signal counterfactual reasoning. It is precise and unambiguous, which exam markers value. Linking back to Emma’s case, a slightly earlier arrival would have changed the result. Using the correct tense structure communicates that the opportunity is now closed. This clarity is central to B2 writing and speaking.

5
Reported speech: Emma said she ______ the ticket weeks before.
Correct answer: B — had booked

In reported speech, we often backshift to keep the sequence clear when the reported action happened before the reporting time. “She said she had booked the ticket” indicates booking occurred earlier than the act of saying. Option A (“booked”) can be acceptable in some contexts, but it may blur the earlier-than-past relationship in a narrative where timing matters. Option C is Present Perfect and suggests a present relevance that does not match a past narrative. Option D is continuous and would emphasize an ongoing process, which is strange for a completed booking. The Past Perfect in reported speech neatly marks the prior action. This helps readers follow cause and effect—Emma’s earlier booking contrasts with her later failure to catch the flight. In exams, clarity of sequence earns marks for cohesion. Use Past Perfect for the earlier layer and then return to Simple Past. This disciplined timeline control is a hallmark of strong B2 writing. Always ask whether there is a past-before-past relationship that needs signposting.

Part 3 — Tutorial 2

Go deeper: sequencing with before/after/by the time, adverb placement (already/just/never), negatives, questions, and choosing between Past Perfect and Past Perfect Continuous. All examples connect to Emma’s airport story.

A1. by the time + later past
Earlier pastReferenceLater past
Rule: Use Past Perfect for the earlier action, and Simple Past for the later action.
By the time Emma arrived, the flight had already left.
By the time she woke up, the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes.
Why Past Perfect here? (tap to reveal)
Past Perfect clarifies that the plane’s departure happened before her arrival, so readers don’t misread the order. With by the time, we typically anchor the later point in Simple Past and reach back with Past Perfect. The form had + V3 is consistent for all subjects. Adding adverbs (e.g., already) intensifies completion before the later moment. For duration leading to the later past, choose Past Perfect Continuous. Here, had been waiting emphasizes a build-up that explains the outcome. Consistency helps cohesion: earlier layer = Past Perfect; later layer = Simple Past. Overusing Past Perfect can feel heavy; use it where the sequence might be unclear.
A2. before / after for flexible order
Rule: Before + Past Perfect (earlier) → Simple Past (later). After can invert the order.
Emma had booked her ticket before she checked the schedule again.
After the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes, she finally came downstairs.
Tip: Do we always need Past Perfect with before/after?
Not always. If the order is crystal clear, Simple Past in both clauses can work in informal storytelling. However, Past Perfect is safer in exams and reports when precision matters. With after, you can also put the earlier event second in writing, because the word itself marks sequence. Still, Past Perfect avoids any doubt for the reader. When there is potential confusion or multiple past actions, use Past Perfect to signal what was completed first. This strategic choice improves coherence and marks a B2+ command of narrative tense control.
B. Adverbs & Emphasis
Placement: Put adverbs between had and the past participle (V3): had already left, had just arrived, had never missed.
She had already packed when the taxi arrived. earlier completed
She had just fallen asleep when the alarm went off. immediate sequence
She had never missed a flight before. emphatic experience
Warning: Avoid *did had* or placing adverbs after V3 in this structure (✗ had left already in formal writing). Use had + adverb + V3.
Why do adverbs matter with Past Perfect?
Adverbs sharpen meaning: already stresses completion, just signals recent completion before a later past, and never/ever express lifetime experience up to that past point. This nuance helps you justify outcomes (e.g., why Emma missed the flight). It also reduces ambiguity when readers reconstruct the timeline. In exam writing, precise adverb placement demonstrates control of form and meaning. Keep the pattern tight: had + adverb + V3. This micro-structure increases clarity and earns cohesion credit.
C1. Negatives
Form: had not (hadn’t) + V3
Emma hadn’t realised how late it was before she checked the time.
The staff hadn’t seen her email before the desk closed.
Common error: *didn’t had*?
Use the auxiliary had for Past Perfect; the Simple Past auxiliary did does not combine with had + V3. The correct negative is had not + V3. Keep the earlier-past meaning clear by preserving the had auxiliary. This distinction is crucial in formal contexts and exams.
C2. Questions
Form: Had + subject + V3?Short answers: Yes, she had. / No, she hadn’t.
Had Emma set her alarm correctly?
Yes, she had. / No, she hadn’t.
Tip: When should I use questions with Past Perfect?
Use them to confirm background conditions that affected a later outcome. In Emma’s case, checking whether she had set the alarm helps explain the missed flight. In interviews and reports, such questions establish cause-and-effect before a key past moment. This technique strengthens logical flow and supports analysis in B2 writing.
D. Choosing the Right Aspect

Past Perfect (had + V3) — highlights completion before a later past point.

Past Perfect Continuous (had been + V-ing) — highlights duration/process leading up to a later past point.

Completion: She had booked the ticket weeks earlier. result done
Duration: She had been checking flight updates for hours before the delay was announced. ongoing up to later past
How to choose?
Ask: “Do I need done-before or how-long/ongoing?” For punctual results that explain a later past, use Past Perfect. For build-ups (waiting, working, trying) that influence a later outcome, use Past Perfect Continuous. In Emma’s story, the taxi’s waiting is a process leading to her late arrival, so continuous fits. Her booking is a finished action completed well before, so non-continuous is best. Mixing them strategically makes your narrative precise and natural at B2+.
E. When Not to Use It
Use Simple Past when there is only one past action or when the order is obvious (e.g., timestamps already show which came first). Overusing Past Perfect can clutter style and slow reading. Return to Simple Past once the earlier layer is established.
She arrived at 6 a.m. (single event; no earlier relation needed).
Editor’s trick: establishing then easing off
Start a paragraph with Past Perfect to set the earlier conditions, then switch to Simple Past for the main action line once the sequence is clear. This technique keeps readers oriented without overwhelming them with auxiliaries. It balances precision and flow — a key B2 writing habit.
F. Quick Build Templates
Copy and adapt these patterns for your own sentences.
By the time + S + Simple Past, S + had + V3
Before S + Simple Past, S + had + V3
After S + had + V3, S + Simple Past
If S + had + V3, S + would have + V3.
Pro move: swap clauses to vary rhythm
Switching clause order (By the time… clause first or second) changes emphasis but not meaning. Use this to foreground either the later past or the earlier cause. In exam writing, such control improves cohesion and reader engagement. Always keep tense choices stable as you reorder clauses.

Part 4 — Exercise 2 (MCQ)

Select the best answer. The correct option and a detailed explanation will appear the moment you choose.

1
Choose the best option with by the time and correct adverb placement.
Correct answer: D — By the time Emma arrived, the plane had already left.

With by the time, the clause that marks the later reference point typically uses Simple Past, and the earlier event uses Past Perfect. Option D follows this pairing: “arrived” (later past) and “had already left” (earlier past). The adverb “already” is correctly placed between “had” and the past participle “left,” which is the standard slot in Past Perfect. Option A misplaces the adverb after the main verb “left” and before the auxiliary “had,” which sounds awkward and is not the preferred structure. Option B mixes a present-time arrival (“arrives”) with a Past Perfect main clause; this creates an inconsistent timeline. Option C front-loads Past Perfect for the arrival, then uses Simple Past for the earlier departure, reversing the logic and adding an informal “already” at the end. In narratives, consistency matters: later past = Simple Past; earlier past = Past Perfect. Adverb placement strengthens meaning without disturbing the structure. Examiners value clarity of sequence and clean auxiliary placement. Remember: had + adverb + V3 is the most natural and precise pattern in formal writing.

2
Which sentence does not require the Past Perfect for clarity?
Correct answer: B — She arrived at 6 a.m.

Past Perfect is primarily used to show an earlier past relative to a later past reference. Option B presents a single, time-stamped past event; there is no competing action that needs to be positioned earlier, so Simple Past is sufficient. In Option A, there are two actions and a clear earlier/later relationship; Past Perfect for “had left” highlights that the departure preceded Emma’s arrival. Option C uses “before,” which invites an earlier event; Past Perfect properly marks that earlier action. Option D shows duration leading up to a later past event, so Past Perfect Continuous is appropriate. Using Past Perfect when it is unnecessary can make writing heavy. Skilled writers introduce Past Perfect to establish background and then return to Simple Past. This keeps the narrative crisp while preserving temporal precision. Reserve Past Perfect for moments when sequence could be misread without it. In exams, overuse may not earn extra credit; correct, strategic use does.

3
Reported speech: Choose the best backshift.
Correct answer: C — Emma said she had booked the ticket weeks ago.

In reported speech, we often backshift the tense to show that the reported action happened before the act of reporting. Option C uses Past Perfect to mark that earlier booking relative to the later speech act. Option A is direct speech, which is fine in quotes, but the prompt asks for reported speech. Option B mixes a present-oriented perfect (“has booked”) with a definite past time (“weeks ago”), which is a tense-time mismatch. Option D is ungrammatical because “had been book” does not form a valid Past Perfect or Past Perfect Continuous. Past Perfect communicates completion prior to the reporting moment and keeps the timeline clean. This is especially useful when the earlier action explains a later consequence, as in Emma’s story. Examiners reward consistent backshifting when it clarifies sequence. After establishing the earlier layer, return to Simple Past for the main narrative line. This disciplined alternation increases cohesion and readability at B2 level.

4
Pick the best sentence to highlight duration before a later past time.
Correct answer: A — By the time Emma woke up, the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes.

To emphasize duration leading up to a later past reference, use the Past Perfect Continuous: had been + V-ing. Option A matches the structure and the meaning precisely: “woke up” (later past) and “had been waiting” (ongoing earlier state). Option B combines a present-time subordinate clause with Past Perfect in the main clause, which causes a tense clash. Option C uses Simple Past for an interval that clearly spans time prior to the later past, losing the sense of continuity. Option D mixes Past Perfect in the dependent clause with Present Perfect Continuous in the main clause, creating an incoherent timeline. In narratives like Emma’s, continuous aspect conveys build-up and pressure. This helps explain outcomes such as missing a flight. Choose the continuous form when “how long” matters more than mere completion. When only completion matters, prefer Past Perfect simple. Accurate aspect choice signals strong B2 control and improves narrative logic.

5
Find the best negative or question form in Past Perfect.
Correct answer: C — Hadn’t she checked the gate number earlier?

In Past Perfect, the auxiliary is had, so negatives and questions must use had, not did. Option C is a correct negative question: “Hadn’t she checked…?” Options A and B incorrectly use “didn’t … had,” which mixes auxiliaries from Simple Past and Past Perfect. Option D lacks the auxiliary entirely, resulting in an ungrammatical form. Keep the structure: Had + subject + V3? for questions and had not (hadn’t) + V3 for negatives. Short answers also keep had: “Yes, she had.” / “No, she hadn’t.” This precision is essential when verifying earlier conditions that explain later outcomes. Examiners look for accurate auxiliary handling as evidence of tense mastery. Misusing did suggests confusion between Simple Past and Past Perfect. Practice building questions and negatives until the auxiliary choice feels automatic.

Part 5 — Tutorial 3

Level up your control of Past Perfect: contrast it with Simple Past and Present Perfect, master narrative sequencing, fix frequent errors, and use ready-made frames for speaking and writing. All examples connect to Emma’s airport story.

G1. Past Perfect vs Simple Past

Past Perfect (had + V3) marks the earlier past. Simple Past states the later past fact.

Earlier → Later: The flight had left before Emma arrived at the gate.
Later only: Emma arrived at 6 a.m. no earlier action needed
Coach’s note: When can Simple Past be enough?
If the order is obvious (timestamps or chronological narration), Simple Past for both verbs can be acceptable in informal storytelling. In exams, prefer Past Perfect when there is any risk of confusion. Use Past Perfect to set background conditions at the start of a paragraph, then switch back to Simple Past for the action line. This combination keeps style light and sequence crystal clear.
G2. Past Perfect vs Present Perfect
Present Perfect (have/has + V3) links past to the present. Past Perfect links an earlier past to a later past.
Present Perfect (now-link): She has never missed a flight (in her life up to now).
Past Perfect (then-link): She had never missed a flight before that day.
Warning: Don’t mix a present perfect with a closed past time (✗ has booked weeks ago). Use had booked or booked instead.
H. Narrative Sequencing: Reorder Without Losing Logic
You can lead with the later action and then “step back” to the earlier action. The tenses will carry the meaning: Simple Past (later) + Past Perfect (earlier).
Version A: Emma arrived at 6 a.m., but the plane had already left.
Version B: The plane had already left when Emma arrived at 6 a.m.
Which version is better? (tap to reveal)
Both versions are correct. Choose based on what you want to emphasize. Version A foregrounds Emma’s arrival (later past) and then explains the cause (earlier departure). Version B foregrounds the earlier event, making the disappointment more predictable. In exam writing, vary order to improve rhythm while keeping tense pairing stable.
Mini challenge: Improve this: “She checked the time. The taxi waited 15 minutes.”
“By the time she checked the time, the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes.” The Past Perfect Continuous conveys duration that leads up to the later check, explaining why she was already late. This upgrade adds cohesion and causal logic without more words.
I1. Fix the Form
Did she had booked the ticket?
Had she booked the ticket?
She didn’t had notice the change.
✓ She hadn’t noticed the change.
Why?
Past Perfect relies on the auxiliary had; do not introduce did. Questions invert had before the subject; negatives use had not/hadn’t before V3. Keeping the auxiliary consistent preserves the “earlier than past” meaning.
I2. Adverbs in the Slot
✗ She had left already when I called. (overly informal in exams)
✓ She had already left when I called.
✓ She had just fallen asleep when the alarm sounded.
Why here?
The natural slot is had + adverb + V3. “Already” and “just” refine completion timing. This micro-placement makes explanations tighter and helps markers see your control immediately.
J. Build-Your-Own Frames
Tap a frame to select; paste into your notes and replace the brackets.
J1. By the time frame
By the time [S] V2, [S] had + V3.
By the time Emma arrived, the plane had already left.
J2. Before / After frame
Before [S] V2, [S] had + V3. / After [S] had + V3, [S] V2.
J3. Duration frame (PPC)
[S] had been + V-ing for [time] when [S] V2.
The taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes when she woke up.
J4. Regret / 3rd Conditional
If [S] had + V3, [S] would have + V3.
If she had arrived earlier, she would have caught the flight.
K. Speaking Boost — Prompt Cards
Use Past Perfect to explain causes before a past moment. Tap for model ideas.
K1. Explain why you missed an appointment last year.
Mention at least two earlier actions with Past Perfect that caused the miss. Example idea: “I had set two alarms but I had turned one off in my sleep; the bus had already left by the time I arrived.”
K2. Describe a time a plan failed because of earlier problems.
Frame the later failure in Simple Past, then step back with Past Perfect for two background issues. Add one duration with Past Perfect Continuous for depth (e.g., “we had been waiting for weeks…”).
L. Writing Checklist (B2)
Sequence clear? Earlier = had + V3 Later = V2 Adverbs in slot Use PPC for duration Avoid “did … had” Don’t overuse
Quick self-test
Can you remove one Past Perfect without losing clarity? If yes, keep the simpler version. If not, keep Past Perfect. This habit balances precision with readability.

Part 6 — Exercise 3 (MCQ)

Choose the best option. The correct answer and a detailed explanation will appear right after you select.

1
Choose the best sentence for a clear earlier–later sequence.
Correct answer: A — realised (later) … had turned off (earlier)

Option A pairs the later discovery in Simple Past with the earlier cause in Past Perfect, which is the classic sequence. “Realised” is the later reference point; “had turned off” marks the earlier action that explains it. Option B reverses the aspect choice and weakens the logic because the “realising” happened after turning off the alarm. Option C mixes a present-tense main verb with a Past Perfect cause, which breaks the timeline. Option D is ungrammatical: “had been realised” would require a passive pattern and is not intended here. In narratives, keep later facts in Simple Past and move earlier causes into Past Perfect. That contrast prevents readers from misinterpreting order. It also mirrors how examiners expect temporal control at B2 level. Remember: choose Past Perfect only when you need “past-before-past,” not for every past idea. Once the background is set, return to Simple Past to keep the story flowing. This balance keeps your writing precise and readable.

2
Pick the sentence that correctly uses Past Perfect Continuous for duration.
Correct answer: D — had been + V-ing (duration → later past)

The Past Perfect Continuous signals an activity that started earlier and continued up to a later past moment. Option D aligns perfectly: the later point is “when the taxi arrived”; the ongoing earlier activity is “had been checking.” Option A is malformed because “had checking” is not a valid structure; it needs “had been checking.” Option B uses the simple aspect “had checked,” which shows completion, not duration; it loses the sense of ongoing effort. Option C clashes tenses by combining a present-oriented perfect continuous with a past-time anchor. Use the continuous aspect when “how long” matters or when you want to show build-up. This choice often strengthens cause-and-effect explanations. In Emma’s case, long checking can explain later tiredness or confusion. Accurate aspect choice is a hallmark of B2 control. Decide: completion (Past Perfect) versus duration (Past Perfect Continuous). Choose the one that best supports your meaning.

3
Reported speech with a clear earlier action. Choose the best option.
Correct answer: B — backshift to Past Perfect for “earlier than saying”

In reported speech, use Past Perfect to show an action that happened before the reporting moment. Option B does exactly that: booking occurred weeks earlier than “said.” Option A can be acceptable in some contexts, but it risks blurring the earlier-than-past relation. Option C mismatches the present perfect with a finished past time (“weeks ago”), which is inaccurate. Option D is ungrammatical: “had been book” is not a valid form. Backshifting helps readers track cause and timing in investigations, reports, and stories. It’s especially helpful when you must justify a later outcome with earlier facts. In exams, consistent backshift earns cohesion and accuracy points. After you establish the earlier layer in Past Perfect, resume the main line in Simple Past. This keeps the temporal architecture stable and easy to follow. Use backshift as a clarity tool, not a decoration.

4
Choose the best negative form in Past Perfect.
Correct answer: C — hadn’t + V3 (auxiliary = had)

Past Perfect uses the auxiliary had, so the negative is “had not (hadn’t) + past participle.” Option C follows this exactly and clearly marks the earlier action as missing. Option A mixes the Simple Past auxiliary “did” with “had,” which is a common but serious error. Option B drops the auxiliary structure entirely, creating an ungrammatical pattern. Option D uses a be-auxiliary with a past participle, which is not the Past Perfect form. Accurate auxiliary choice signals that you understand how the tense is built. It also helps the reader instantly recognise the earlier-than-past relation. In narrative chains, a single mistaken auxiliary can confuse the timeline. Practice negatives and questions until the form is automatic. Keep “had” for Past Perfect and avoid importing “did.” This habit protects both grammar and coherence.

5
Complete the Third Conditional correctly.
Correct answer: A — If + Past Perfect … would have + V3

The Third Conditional describes an unreal past and its unreal result. Form: If + Past Perfectwould have + past participle. Option A matches this exactly and fits Emma’s missed-flight scenario. Option B uses a Simple Past if-clause with a perfect result, which mismatches time. Option C pairs Past Perfect with a present-result form, which is not a past counterfactual. Option D doubles the modal (“would have”) in the if-clause, which is incorrect. Use the Third Conditional to express regret or alternative outcomes in narratives and reports. It demonstrates precise temporal reasoning at B2 level. Keep the main clause perfect (“would have caught”) to anchor the result as unreal and closed. If you want a softer, speculative tone, you can switch to “might have” or “could have.” But the structure must remain consistent to stay grammatical and clear.

Part 7 — Tutorial 4

Apply Past Perfect in real contexts: narratives, apology emails, and incident reports. Then upgrade sentences and build your own with interactive frames. All examples extend Emma’s airport story.

M1. Storytelling (Narrative Flow)
Use Simple Past for the main line and Past Perfect to step back for earlier causes.
Main line: Emma arrived at 6 a.m. The gate closed minutes earlier.
Step back: The plane had already left. She had turned off her alarm in her sleep.
Why this works (tap)
Readers follow time forward. When you “step back,” the Past Perfect flags a prior layer. This prevents misreading and adds cause-and-effect. After you establish the earlier layer, return to Simple Past to keep pace. Use Past Perfect sparingly for clarity, not decoration.
M2. Apology / Rescheduling Email

Subject: Missed Flight — Request to Rebook

Dear Customer Support,

I’m writing because I missed my 6 a.m. flight. By the time I arrived, the plane had already left. I had booked the ticket weeks earlier, and I had set my alarm, but I must have turned it off in my sleep. When I woke up, the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes.

Could you please advise on the earliest available alternative? Thank you for your help.

Best regards, Emma

Why the Past Perfect here?
It isolates prior conditions (“had booked,” “had set,” “had been waiting”) that explain the missed flight. This sequencing strengthens accountability and keeps the message professional and coherent.
N. Incident Report (Concise, Cause → Outcome)
Pattern: Later Past (facts) + Earlier Past (Past Perfect causes).
Later facts: At 06:05, Emma arrived at the check-in desk; the flight had closed.
Earlier causes: The passenger had turned off the alarm; the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes.
Pro tip: timestamps reduce the need for Past Perfect—when still use it?
Use it to spotlight causal chains or when multiple prior steps might confuse order. Timestamps show “when”; Past Perfect shows “before which past.”
O1. Upgrade the Sentence
She arrived at 6 a.m. The plane left.
Upgrade (tap)
She arrived at 6 a.m., but the plane had already left. This marks the earlier departure with Past Perfect and removes ambiguity.
She was late because she turned off the alarm.
Upgrade (tap)
She was late because she had turned off the alarm in her sleep. The Past Perfect highlights the prior cause of the later lateness.
O2. Continuous vs Simple
The taxi waited for 15 minutes when she woke up.
Upgrade (tap)
By the time she woke up, the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes. Use Past Perfect Continuous to emphasize duration up to the later past.
She checked updates for hours before the taxi arrived.
Upgrade (tap)
She had been checking updates for hours when the taxi arrived. Duration + later past reference = strong continuous choice.
P. Build & Compare
Tap to reveal model lines. Copy the structure and replace the brackets.
P1. By the time …
By the time [S] V2, [S] had + V3.
By the time Emma arrived, the plane had already left.
P2. Before / After …
Before [S] V2, [S] had + V3. / After [S] had + V3, [S] V2.
P3. Duration up to later past
[S] had been + V-ing for [time] when [S] V2.
The taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes when she woke up.
P4. Regret (Third Conditional)
If [S] had + V3, [S] would have + V3.
If she had arrived earlier, she would have caught the flight.
Q. Mini Dialogues
A: Why did you miss it? B: By the time I arrived, they had closed the gate.
A: Were you prepared? B: I had packed everything, but I had turned off the alarm.
arrived → got to the gate had closed → had already closed had packed → had prepared had turned off → had accidentally disabled
How to practice
Swap the tagged phrases and keep the tense structure. Maintain later actions in Simple Past and earlier actions in Past Perfect. Record yourself and check that “had + V3” is audible where needed.

Part 8 — Exercise 4 (MCQ)

Choose the best option. The correct answer and a detailed explanation appear as soon as you select.

1
Choose the best sentence using before/after with correct tense sequencing.
Correct answer: C — Before Emma arrived, the plane had already left.

With before/after, we still need to signal which action was earlier. Past Perfect marks the earlier action, and Simple Past marks the later reference point. Option C follows this logic perfectly: “arrived” (later past) versus “had already left” (earlier past). Option A uses only Simple Past, which can work in informal storytelling, but it risks ambiguity in exams. Option B puts Past Perfect in both clauses; while possible in heavy backgrounding, it is unnecessary and clunky here. Option D uses Past Perfect for Emma’s arrival even though it is the later event; that reverses the chronology cue. In narratives, you can lead with either clause, but keep the aspect contrast intact. Adverbs like “already” fit naturally between had and the past participle. Always ask: which event must readers process as prior? Mark that one with Past Perfect for clarity. Then return to Simple Past to keep the main line moving smoothly.

2
Select the sentence that correctly expresses past experience up to a past point.
Correct answer: A — Until that day, Emma had never missed a flight.

When you summarise experience up to a specific past reference, Past Perfect is ideal. Option A uses “had never missed,” which situates the lifetime experience before “that day.” Option B uses Present Perfect, which links to the present, not to a past anchor; this clashes with “until that day.” Option C uses Simple Past with “yet,” which is stylistically odd and fails to pin the experience to a past point. Option D misuses “ever” in an affirmative statement where “never” is needed to express zero experience. The adverb “never” fits naturally between had and the past participle. This pattern is common in reports, biographies, and reflective narratives. It helps examiners instantly read your intended timeline. Remember the trio: Present Perfect → link to now; Past Perfect → link to a later past; Simple Past → single past fact. Choose the one that matches your time anchor. That choice drives both grammar accuracy and cohesion.

3
Fill the blank with the best option: “By the time the taxi arrived, she ____ her passport and bag.”
Correct answer: D — had prepared

The clause “By the time the taxi arrived” sets a later past reference point. We therefore mark the earlier completed action with Past Perfect. “Had prepared” presents a finished result that existed before the taxi’s arrival. Option A suggests an action in progress, but the sentence needs completion before the later time. Option B is Simple Present and does not fit a past narrative frame. Option C is ungrammatical; the correct continuous form would be “had been preparing,” which emphasises duration rather than completion. Here, the emphasis is on readiness, so simple Past Perfect is best. This result-vs-duration decision is central to aspect choice at B2. Ask whether the state should be complete at the time of reference. If yes, use Past Perfect simple. If the ongoing nature matters, switch to Past Perfect Continuous instead.

4
Choose the best question in Past Perfect to verify an earlier condition.
Correct answer: B — Had she checked the email before leaving?

Past Perfect questions invert the auxiliary had before the subject. Option B follows the pattern exactly and checks a prior condition relative to a later past action. Option A incorrectly mixes the Simple Past auxiliary “did” with Past Perfect material. Option C uses Present Perfect, which targets a now-link rather than a past anchor. Option D is a statement with rising intonation, not a proper inversion for formal writing. Use these questions to confirm background steps that could explain later outcomes. In narratives and reports, they establish cause-and-effect efficiently. Keep short answers consistent: “Yes, she had.” / “No, she hadn’t.” This auxiliary discipline demonstrates tense control at B2 level. It also prevents readers from misreading your timeline, especially in multi-step scenarios.

5
Third Conditional nuance: choose the best version for a slightly uncertain result.
Correct answer: A — If + Past Perfect … might have + V3

The Third Conditional expresses an unreal past and its hypothetical result. “Would have + V3” presents a certain hypothetical result, while “might have + V3” softens it to probability. Option A uses Past Perfect in the if-clause and a modal perfect in the main clause to show uncertainty. Option B mixes Past Perfect with a present-result form, which does not target a closed past scenario. Option C swaps clause tenses and also mismatches the time reference. Option D repeats the modal with “would have” inside the if-clause, which is ungrammatical in standard usage. Use “might have” or “could have” when you want to suggest a plausible but not guaranteed outcome. This subtlety is valuable in analysis, reports, and polite argumentation. It allows writers to acknowledge unknown factors. Keeping the structure consistent preserves grammatical accuracy and reader trust. The nuance sits in the main clause modal, not in the if-clause tense.

Part 9 — Tutorial 5

Master the Past Perfect in connected writing: use cohesive markers, transform timelines cleanly, diagnose errors fast, adjust register, and build a polished paragraph from smart frames. All examples extend Emma’s airport story.

R. Cohesive Markers + Past Perfect
Use discourse markers to signal relations while Past Perfect handles “earlier than past.” Try: by the time, previously, earlier, beforehand, already, no sooner … than, hardly … when.
Previously, Emma had set her alarm, but she had turned it off in her sleep.
No sooner had the plane left than the gate announcement came through.
Hardly had she woken when she realised the taxi had been waiting.
Style tip: Inversion patterns (no sooner / hardly)
These formal markers invert the auxiliary before the subject (had she woken). Use sparingly for emphasis. They work well in reports and reflective essays. Keep the later event in Simple Past to preserve the time contrast.
S1. Upgrade the Timeline

Flat version: Emma arrived at 6 a.m. The plane left earlier.

Layered version: Emma arrived at 6 a.m., but the plane had already left.

Why the upgrade works
The Past Perfect marks the departure as prior to the arrival, removing ambiguity. “Already” sits between had and V3, intensifying completion. This pairing (later Simple Past + earlier Past Perfect) is the core narrative scaffold.
Try: She checked the time. The taxi waited 15 minutes. → By the time she checked the time, the taxi had been waiting 15 minutes.
S2. Choose Completion vs Duration
Ask: Do I need a finished result or how-long background?
Result: She had prepared her documents before the taxi arrived. complete state
Duration: She had been preparing documents for an hour when the taxi arrived. ongoing to later past
Don’t mix Present Perfect with a closed past time marker (✗ has prepared yesterday).
T. Error Diagnosis
Spot the issue; tap to reveal the fix and explanation.
1) Did she had booked the ticket?
Fix
Had she booked the ticket? — Past Perfect uses the auxiliary had for questions; don’t import did.
2) By the time she wakes up, the taxi had been waiting 15 minutes.
Fix
By the time she woke up, the taxi had been waiting 15 minutes. — Align both clauses with a past anchor.
3) She had left already when I arrived. (exam narrative)
Better
✓ She had already left when I arrived. — Place adverbs between had and V3 in formal writing.
U1. Narrative (neutral)
Emma arrived at 6 a.m., but the plane had already left. She had set an alarm; however, she had turned it off in her sleep.
Note
Focus on readability. Establish the earlier layer, then switch back to Simple Past for pace.
U2. Incident Report (formal)
At 06:00 the passenger arrived at the terminal; the flight had closed prior to arrival. The passenger had set an alarm but had turned it off inadvertently. The taxi had been waiting for approximately 15 minutes.
Why this tone?
Formal reporting compresses actions into facts + prior causes. Past Perfect isolates the prior layer cleanly.
V. Build a Cohesive Paragraph
Use this frame. Keep the later line in Simple Past, and mark earlier causes with Past Perfect. Click a template to copy, then adapt. Type your final paragraph below.
0 words
Model (tap)
By the time Emma arrived at the airport, the plane had already left. She had booked her ticket weeks earlier and had set an alarm, but she had turned it off in her sleep. When she finally woke up, the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes. If she had arrived a little earlier, she would have caught the flight.
W. Quick Self-Check (B2)
Later facts = Simple Past? Earlier layer = had + V3? Duration needs PPC? Adverbs in the slot? Backshift in reports? No “did … had”?
Editor’s trick
Read only your verbs in order. If the story still makes sense chronologically, your tense layering works.

Part 10 — Exercise 5 (MCQ)

Choose the best option. The correct answer and a detailed explanation will appear right after you select.

1
Pick the most natural sentence with by + time and correct aspect choice.
Correct answer: B — plane (earlier) = Past Perfect; arrival (later) = Simple Past

The phrase “by 6 a.m.” sets a time boundary that often triggers Past Perfect for what was completed before that point. In the missed-flight story, the departure is the earlier event, so “had already left” is ideal. Emma’s later arrival is a subsequent fact expressed in Simple Past. Option A is ungrammatical because “had arrive” lacks the past participle form “arrived.” Option C reverses aspect logic, using Simple Past for the earlier event and Past Perfect for the later one, which confuses sequence. Option D mixes Present Perfect (“has arrived”) with a finished past narrative, creating a tense clash. This pairing—earlier Past Perfect with later Simple Past—keeps timelines crisp for readers and examiners. The adverb “already” belongs between “had” and the past participle in formal writing. Reserve Past Perfect for moments when you must highlight “past before past.” Return to Simple Past once the background is clear to avoid heaviness. That rhythm improves readability and keeps cohesion tight at B2 level.

2
Choose the best sentence emphasizing duration up to a later past point.
Correct answer: D — Past Perfect Continuous for ongoing action → later past

Past Perfect Continuous (had been + V-ing) marks an activity that began earlier and continued right up to a later past reference. The later point here is “when the taxi arrived.” Option D captures that continuity, which explains fatigue or distraction in the narrative. Option A uses Past Perfect simple, signaling completion rather than ongoing duration. Option B mismatches tenses, pairing Past Continuous with Past Perfect in a way that blurs the anchor time. Option C uses Present Perfect Continuous with a past-time anchor, creating a timeline clash. Choose continuous when the “how long” dimension matters to the outcome. This aspect choice strengthens cause-and-effect in reports and stories. It also shows examiners that you can control aspect for nuance, not just tense for sequence. After duration is established, return to Simple Past to move the plot forward efficiently.

3
Select the best reported speech version for an earlier action.
Correct answer: A — backshift to Past Perfect

In reported speech, we backshift to show that the reported action occurred before the act of reporting. “Had set” marks the earlier action clearly. Option B adds “now,” which conflicts with the past-time frame and produces an odd deictic mix. Option C uses Present Perfect with “the night before,” a closed past marker, which is inconsistent. Option D is ungrammatical because “had been set” would be passive and needs a different structure. Backshift is especially useful when multiple prior actions explain a later result, as in Emma’s case. It guides readers through the causal chain with minimal wording. Keep time markers consistent with your tense choices to avoid mixed signals. After reporting earlier actions, switch back to Simple Past for the main narrative. This alternation supports cohesive, exam-ready paragraphs.

4
Form a correct negative question in Past Perfect to check a prior step.
Correct answer: C — Hadn’t + subject + V3?

Past Perfect uses the auxiliary had for questions and negatives. A negative question therefore inverts “had” and contracts “not” before the subject. Option C matches this pattern and politely checks a prior condition. Option A wrongly imports “did,” the Simple Past auxiliary, which breaks the Past Perfect structure. Option B splits auxiliaries in an ungrammatical order. Option D uses Present Perfect, which targets a now-link rather than a prior-to-past relation. In formal writing, prefer clear inversion over rising-intonation statements. Use short answers that keep the auxiliary: “Yes, she had.” / “No, she hadn’t.” This precision signals strong tense control and protects the timeline from ambiguity. Practise negatives and questions until the auxiliary choice is automatic.

5
Pick the best Third Conditional with a strong, certain result.
Correct answer: B — If + Past Perfect … would have + V3

The Third Conditional models unreal past situations and their hypothetical results. For a certain hypothetical outcome, use “would have + V3” in the main clause. Option B follows the standard template and fits Emma’s scenario perfectly. Option A uses “might catch,” which mixes a present-result form with a past if-clause and weakens the temporal match. Option C puts Simple Past in the if-clause and a perfect result in the main clause, creating a mismatch. Option D duplicates the modal “would have” inside the if-clause, which is ungrammatical in standard usage. Keep time references aligned across the two clauses to maintain coherence. You can soften certainty with “might have” or “could have” if needed, but the structure stays the same. This pattern is widely tested because it reveals both tense control and logical precision. Use it to show clear, counterfactual reasoning in essays and reports.

Part 11 — Tutorial 6

Deepen your control of Past Perfect with advanced choices: stative vs dynamic verbs, flashback paragraphs, relative clause linking, modals vs Past Perfect (“should have / would have”) and rapid sentence builders. Examples continue Emma’s airport situation.

X1. Stative Verbs with Past Perfect
Stative verbs (know, believe, want, love, own, understand, seem) usually don’t take the continuous form. Use had + V3 to show a prior state before a later past point.
She had known about the early gate closure before she arrived.
Emma had wanted to leave at five, but she woke up late.
Avoid:had been knowing, ✗ had been wanting (rare in standard usage).
Why not continuous?
Stative verbs describe conditions or mental states rather than activities. Past Perfect already places that state before a later past moment. The continuous form would sound unnatural or change meaning in formal writing.
X2. Dynamic Verbs with Past Perfect Continuous
Use had been + V-ing for activities that continued up to the later past and explain an outcome.
She had been checking updates for hours when the taxi arrived. duration → later past
The taxi had been waiting 15 minutes before she came downstairs. build-up
Choose: result vs duration?
If you need a completed result at the reference time, choose Past Perfect simple. If “how long” matters or the action was ongoing, choose Past Perfect Continuous. This choice adds nuance and keeps logic tight in narratives and reports.
Y. Building Flashbacks Cleanly
Technique: start with the later scene (Simple Past), then flash back using Past Perfect for 1–3 sentences, then return to Simple Past. Keep the “earlier layer” short to avoid heaviness.

Later scene: Emma arrived at 6 a.m. and the screens showed “Gate Closed”.

Flashback: She had booked weeks earlier and had set an alarm, but she had turned it off in her sleep.

Return: She called her friend and explained everything.

Why it reads well
Readers anchor to the main timeline quickly. A short Past Perfect segment explains causes without derailing momentum. Returning to Simple Past restores pace and keeps the narrative easy to follow at B2–C1 level.
Z1. Relative Clauses
Use Past Perfect in the relative clause to mark “earlier than past” inside complex sentences.
Emma missed the flight that she had booked weeks earlier.
She apologised for the delay, which she had caused by turning off the alarm.
Tip: keep the main clause light
Store background details in the relative clause with Past Perfect; keep the main clause in Simple Past to preserve rhythm.
Z2. Adverbial Clauses
Common pairings: before / after / by the time / until.
Before she arrived, the plane had left.
Until she checked, she hadn’t realised the gate had changed.
Avoid: tense clashes like Present Perfect in one clause with a closed past anchor in the other.
AA. “Would/Should/Could + have” vs Past Perfect
had + V3 = earlier fact/state. would/should/could + have + V3 = evaluation or hypothesis about a past possibility/obligation/result.
Fact: She had set an alarm. earlier state
Evaluation: She should have set two alarms. missed obligation
Hypothesis: She would have caught it if she had arrived earlier. counterfactual
Exam pointer
Don’t replace Past Perfect facts with modal perfects. Use modal perfects only to judge, speculate, or express missed duties. Mixing them blurs meaning and weakens analysis.
AB. Rapid Builders — Copy & Adapt
By the time… Before… After… 3rd Conditional… Relative (that)… Previously… so…
Click a chip above to insert a frame here, then type over the brackets.
AC1. Minimal Pairs (Spot the Better One)
A) She arrived at 6 a.m.; the plane left.
B) She arrived at 6 a.m.; the plane had left.
Pick & Justify
B is better for exam clarity because it marks “past before past.” A can work in informal storytelling, but B avoids ambiguity and scores higher for cohesion.
A) By the time she woke up, the taxi waited 15 minutes.
B) By the time she woke up, the taxi had been waiting 15 minutes.
Pick & Justify
B emphasises duration up to the later past, matching the meaning and improving logic.
AC2. Quick Checklist
  • Later line = Simple Past?
  • Earlier layer = had + V3?
  • Duration needs had been + V-ing?
  • Adverbs between had and V3?
  • No did … had errors?
Speed tip
Read only the verbs in order. If the chronology is still obvious, your tense layering is working.

Part 12 — Exercise 6 (MCQ)

Choose the best answer. The correct option and a detailed explanation will appear immediately after you select.

1
Choose the most natural sentence with a stative verb in Past Perfect.
Correct answer: C — had known

Stative verbs like know, believe, and want typically avoid continuous forms because they describe states, not activities. Option C uses Past Perfect simple to mark a prior state clearly relative to the later past reference (“before she arrived”). Option A uses Past Perfect Continuous (“had been knowing”), which sounds unnatural with a stative verb in standard usage. Option B uses Past Continuous (“was knowing”), which is also nonstandard with statives and fails to signal the “earlier-than-past” layer. Option D mixes Present Perfect with a closed past anchor, producing a tense-time clash. In exam writing, Past Perfect simple is the safest choice for prior states that influence later outcomes. Reserve the continuous aspect for dynamic, ongoing activities (e.g., “had been waiting”). This distinction helps you deliver precise meaning without awkward aspect choices. It also improves cohesion, as readers instantly recognise the timeline. When in doubt: state before a past point → had + V3; activity continuing to a past point → had been + V-ing.

2
Pick the version that builds a clean flashback and returns to the main timeline.
Correct answer: A — later Simple Past → short Past Perfect flashback → return to Simple Past

Option A follows a textbook flashback pattern: establish the later scene in Simple Past, insert a short Past Perfect segment to explain prior causes, and return to Simple Past to continue the story. This architecture keeps momentum while signalling “earlier-than-past” information. Option B overloads Past Perfect (“had arrived” and “had called”) where Simple Past should carry the main line, creating heaviness and confusion. Option C mixes present narrative (“arrives/calls”) with Past Perfect, which breaks temporal consistency. Option D clashes tenses and also confuses sequence by placing “had called” before the arrival without a clear reason. For B2 writing, aim for a 1–3 sentence flashback, then quickly rejoin the main timeline. The reader stays oriented, and your cause–effect logic becomes transparent. Overusing Past Perfect reduces readability, so use it strategically. This balance is essential in incident reports, stories, and reflective essays. Think “anchor → flashback → anchor” to structure paragraphs cleanly.

3
Choose the best sentence using a relative clause to show earlier completion.
Correct answer: D — relative clause in Past Perfect marks prior completion

Relative clauses are perfect places to store background details about earlier actions. Option D uses Past Perfect inside the clause to show that the booking preceded the missed flight. Option A uses Present Perfect with a closed past marker (“weeks ago”), which clashes with the time frame. Option B adds “now,” which is deictically inconsistent with a past narrative. Option C uses Past Perfect Continuous (“had been booking”), which implies an ongoing process rather than a completed result, and sounds odd here. By keeping the main clause in Simple Past and the relative clause in Past Perfect, you preserve rhythm and clarity. Examiners reward this compact, cohesive packaging of earlier information. It demonstrates both grammar control and discourse organisation. Use adverbs like “earlier” to strengthen the “prior to past” reading. Always align the aspect choice with your intended meaning: completion versus duration.

4
Pick the sentence that uses a modal perfect correctly (evaluation), not as a replacement for Past Perfect facts.
Correct answer: B — modal perfect for judgement + correct Third Conditional follow-up

Modal perfects (would/should/could + have + V3) express judgement, hypothesis, or missed obligation about a past situation. Option B evaluates a past decision (“should have set”) and then uses a correct Third Conditional to show the hypothetical result. Option A uses “would have set” as if it were a fact, which is speculative and mismatched with the claimed certainty. Option C connects a possibility (“could have set”) to a factual consequence (“she had arrived at six”) without proper conditional structure. Option D is ungrammatical because it stacks the Past Perfect auxiliary with a modal (“had would have”). Keep facts in Past Perfect or Simple Past; use modal perfects to comment on them. This separation preserves meaning: facts vs evaluations. When expressing hypothetical outcomes, maintain If + Past Perfect → would/could/might have + V3. That stable pattern communicates logic and time with minimal effort. It’s a high-value skill in B2 essays and reports.

5
Select the sentence with correct adverb placement and question form in Past Perfect.
Correct answer: A — Inversion with “had” + adverb slot: had + already + V3

Past Perfect questions invert the auxiliary “had” before the subject and place adverbs like “already” between “had” and the past participle. Option A follows this pattern exactly and checks a prior action relative to a later past moment. Option B wrongly mixes “did” with Past Perfect material, a classic error that confuses tense formation. Option C misplaces the adverb (“checked already”), which is less natural in formal writing. Option D uses Present Perfect with a closed past anchor (“before she left”), creating a timeline mismatch. Keeping the adverb in the tight “had + adverb + V3” slot improves precision and flow. Short answers should mirror the auxiliary: “Yes, she had.” / “No, she hadn’t.” Mastering this micro-structure is a reliable way to show B2 control. It also prevents ambiguity in sequences where a tiny placement change can alter meaning. Always check auxiliary choice, inversion, and adverb position together for best results.

Part 13 — Tutorial 7

Finalise your B2 command of the Past Perfect: exam strategies, tense mixing without clashes, advanced connectors, punctuation timing, high-yield transformations, and a compact case study built from Emma’s airport story.

AD. Exam Strategy — Use Past Perfect Where It Scores
Use had + V3 to clarify earlier than past when the timeline could be misread. Switch back to Simple Past once the earlier layer is established.
Narratives Incident reports Witness statements Analytical essays Apologies/justifications
Score-friendly model: By the time Emma arrived, the plane had already left. She called support and explained the earlier issues she had had.
Marker insight
Examiners reward chronology clarity and economical wording. One Past Perfect per earlier action is enough; piling up auxiliaries slows reading. Establish the earlier layer promptly, then continue in Simple Past. Reserve Past Perfect Continuous for durations that influence the result.
AE1. Past Perfect + Simple Past (baseline)
Clean pair: The taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes when she woke up.
Completion vs Duration: She had prepared her passport before the taxi arrived. / She had been preparing it for an hour when it arrived.
Avoid:Did she had…, ✗ present anchors with closed past times.
AE2. Past Perfect + Past Continuous (scene setting)
Background scene: The screens were showing “Gate Closed” because the plane had left minutes earlier.
Why it works
Past Continuous paints the ongoing backdrop at a later past point; Past Perfect adds a prior, completed cause. Keep the anchor time consistent across clauses.
AF. Connectors & Punctuation Timing
Connector choices guide logic; punctuation controls rhythm. Match them to tense layering.
Because-clause: She missed the flight because she had turned off the alarm. prior cause
Therefore (semicolon): She arrived at 6 a.m.; therefore, she had already missed the boarding window. contrast of times
By the time (comma rule): By the time she woke, the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes.
Comma vs semicolon?
Use a comma to attach dependent clauses (by the time, because). Use a semicolon to join related independent clauses (often with linking adverbs like therefore, however). Keep tense contrast visible after the punctuation.
AG1. Before → By the time

Prompt: Before Emma arrived, the plane had left.

Show model
By the time Emma arrived, the plane had already left. — Same logic, different focus. Adverb “already” fits between had and V3.
AG2. Simple Past → Past Perfect (backgrounding)

Prompt: Emma set an alarm, but she turned it off in her sleep. She arrived at 6 a.m.

Show model
Emma arrived at 6 a.m., but she had set an alarm and had turned it off in her sleep. — Later past first; then step back for causes.
AH. Mini Case Study — Reconstruct the Morning
EarlierLater past anchor
Write one sentence per dot using the correct aspect. Then compress them into a 2-sentence summary (later action first, earlier actions second).
Model summary (tap)
Emma arrived at 6 a.m., but the flight had already left. She had booked the ticket weeks earlier, had set an alarm, and had turned it off in her sleep; the taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes.
AI. Decision Matrix — Which Form?

Earlier cause → had + V3 Duration to anchor → had been + V-ing Main storyline → V2 Hypothetical result → would/might have + V3

Check the anchor time. If clauses sit on different anchors (present vs closed past), align them or rephrase.

One-minute check
Read just your verbs in order (arrived → had left → called…). If the story’s time logic stays clear, your mix is sound.
AJ. Micro-Practice — Copy, Replace, Speak
Tap to select; paste and replace brackets.
By the time [S] V2, [S] had + V3. (By the time Emma arrived, the plane had already left.)
[S] had been + V-ing for [time] when [S] V2. (The taxi had been waiting for 15 minutes when she woke up.)
If [S] had + V3, [S] would have + V3. (If she had arrived earlier, she would have caught the flight.)

Part 14 — Exercise 7 (MCQ)

Select the best answer. The correct option and a detailed explanation will appear as soon as you choose.

1
Choose the best sentence linking a later past fact with an earlier cause.
Correct answer: D — later Simple Past + earlier Past Perfect

In narratives, the discovery or outcome typically sits on the later timeline, so we keep it in Simple Past. The underlying cause, which happened before that discovery, goes into Past Perfect to mark “past before past.” Option D follows this cause–effect architecture precisely: “realised” (later) and “had turned off” (earlier). Option A uses Simple Past for both, which may work in casual speech but risks ambiguity in exam contexts. Option B mixes present narrative with Past Perfect, creating a timeline clash that confuses readers. Option C pushes the later fact into Past Perfect, which wrongly suggests the realisation occurred before the cause. Past Perfect is a signalling device: use it where sequence might be misread without it. Once the earlier layer has been identified, return to Simple Past to keep the story moving. This rhythmic alternation prevents heaviness and improves readability. Examiners reward tight temporal logic expressed with minimal, accurate morphology. Always test your sentence by asking: which action is the anchor, and which one needs “had + V3” to step back?

2
Pick the sentence that correctly expresses duration up to a later past point.
Correct answer: A — Past Perfect Continuous for “how long” before the anchor

The Past Perfect Continuous (had been + V-ing) highlights an activity that started earlier and was still relevant up to a later past moment. In Option A, “woke up” is the anchor in Simple Past and the ongoing wait is properly marked by “had been waiting.” Option B mixes a present-time subordinate clause with a past-time main clause, which is inconsistent. Option C downgrades the waiting to a simple, completed event, erasing the sense of continuity that the context demands. Option D collides Past Perfect with Present Perfect Continuous, crossing time frames in one sentence. In exam writing, show duration when it explains the later outcome (fatigue, delay, or urgency). Use Past Perfect simple for completed states and Past Perfect Continuous for ongoing processes. This choice is not cosmetic; it encodes different meanings. Durational background is especially effective when paired with “by the time,” “for,” and “since.” Keep both clauses anchored in the past to avoid deictic confusion. Readers then reconstruct the sequence without effort, which is exactly what markers want.

3
Select the best relative clause version to background an earlier action.
Correct answer: C — Past Perfect inside the relative clause for prior completion

A relative clause is a compact place to store background details without overloading the main clause. Option C uses Past Perfect to mark the booking as prior to the missing, while the main clause stays in Simple Past for pace. Option A uses Present Perfect with “weeks ago,” which conflicts because “ago” fixes a closed past point. Option B adds “now,” a present deictic marker, which clashes with a past narrative. Option D chooses a continuous aspect (“had been booking”), implying an ongoing process rather than a completed result; this is semantically odd for “book a ticket.” The “main fact in Simple Past + earlier detail in Past Perfect” template is reliable in exam summaries and reports. It signals chronology without extra words and keeps sentences balanced. Use “earlier” or “previously” to reinforce the prior status when needed. Remember that aspect communicates meaning: result vs process. Select the aspect that reflects your message, not just the form that looks advanced.

4
Which question correctly checks a prior state with a stative verb?
Correct answer: B — Had + subject + V3 (stative verb, earlier layer)

Past Perfect questions invert the auxiliary “had” and keep the main verb as a past participle. With stative verbs like “know,” the simple (non-continuous) form is preferred because we are talking about a state, not an activity. Option B matches both requirements and neatly checks the earlier state relative to the later arrival. Option A wrongly mixes the Simple Past auxiliary “did” with the Past Perfect auxiliary “had,” producing an ungrammatical hybrid. Option C uses Present Perfect despite the closed past anchor (“before she arrived”), creating a deictic mismatch. Option D uses a continuous form with a stative verb, which sounds nonstandard in formal writing. In exams, accurate auxiliary choice is a quick win because it signals tense control immediately. Keep short answers consistent with the auxiliary: “Yes, she had.” / “No, she hadn’t.” This micro-precision prevents timeline noise and supports cohesive reasoning. Practising question formation with stative verbs will make your sequencing feel effortless.

5
Complete the Third Conditional to show a clear, counterfactual result.
Correct answer: A — If + Past Perfect … would have + V3

The Third Conditional models an unreal past with an unreal, closed result. The if-clause uses Past Perfect to place the condition earlier than the past anchor, and the main clause uses “would have + V3” to express the hypothetical outcome. Option A follows this formula exactly and matches Emma’s missed-flight scenario. Option B uses a Simple Past if-clause with a perfect result, which mismatches the time frame. Option C mixes Past Perfect with a present-result form, suggesting a general truth rather than a closed hypothetical. Option D duplicates the modal “would have” inside the if-clause, which is not standard in formal English. When you want to lower certainty, swap “would have” for “might have” or “could have” while keeping the structure. This pattern is a staple of exam tasks because it tests both tense control and logical thinking. Use it to present balanced, reasoned alternatives in reports and reflective writing. Keep time anchors explicit to avoid any ambiguity about what could have happened and when. Precision in the if-clause drives clarity in the result clause.

Part 15 — End-of-Tutorial Quiz

You’ll get 10 random questions from a bank of 30. Choose an answer to see the instant key and a detailed explanation (10–15 sentences). When you finish, tap Review to see your score and a recap. Tap Retake for a fresh random set.

How it works: We randomly select 10 questions from the 30-item bank below. Your choices are saved for Review. Retake to get a new mix.

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Master work and business phrasal verbs with 5 ultra-challenging, progressive exercises designed for B2-C1 learners. This comprehensive practice set moves...
Master thinking and learning phrasal verbs with 5 ultra-interactive exercises. Progress from accuracy drills to free production. Perfect for C1...
Learn 14 essential work and business phrasal verbs with clear examples, grammar notes, and practice exercises. Perfect for B1-B2+ learners....
Master 14 essential phrasal verbs for fashion and design with this comprehensive, step-by-step tutorial. Learn catch on, dress up, try...