Cadastre-se e acesse o nosso curso de inglês + exercícios on-line: https://pay.kiwify.com.br/PQPByAD Gostou do vídeo? Deixa o LIKE e um "VALEU" de qualquer valor. THANK YOU! 😉 SEJA NOTIFICADO DAS AULAS GRATUITAS PELO WHATSAPP: https://wa.me/5545988221297?text=Gost... -------------------------- REDES SOCIAIS: Instagram: / teacherdejanir Facebook: / teacherdejanir Site: / teacherdejanir.com “I’ve never been there! Aprenda Present Perfect” (00:30) Conversation example: one speaker asks “Have you been to the Pacing Duck on 24th Street?” — illustrates using the present perfect to ask about life experiences. (00:57) Another example: “I’ve been there twice” — showing how the present perfect expresses experiences without specifying when exactly. (04:19) Explanation: difference between been and gone — “been” = visited somewhere (and came back), “gone” = went there and is still there. E.g. “I’ve been to the US three times.” vs “My sister’s gone to the US.” (04:50) Clarification: Use present perfect for unspecified time / emphasis on experience. Use simple past when referring to a specific time. (05:30) Grammatical rule: In present perfect, say “Have you ever eaten …?” rather than past-tense “Did you ever eaten …?” — correct is “Have you ever eaten …?” (06:44–07:20) Practice: forming questions like “Have you ever traveled abroad?” / stating facts “Yes, I have.” vs describing specific past events: “I went to South Korea a few years ago.” (08:50–09:54) Review of irregular past participles and past forms (eat → eaten / ate; drink → drunk / drank; etc.), useful when forming present perfect or past tense. The overall teaching point: contrast between Present Perfect and simple past — when to use each depending on context, time reference, and whether you talk about experiences or defined past events. The video demonstrates these differences through dialogues (with “have you been …?”, “I’ve been …”, “I went … last month”) to make grammar intuitive. It also shows common mistakes (using wrong tense or form), and emphasizes correct usage of “been/gone,” “have you ever …?”, and irregular verb forms. Present Perfect is used for actions without a specified time or when the time isn’t important — often for experiences, repeated actions, or present relevance. Using Present Perfect vs Past Simple depends on whether the action has a time reference or its relevance to now. Past Simple suits completed past actions with definite time; Present Perfect connects past actions to the present. 📘 *Aprenda inglês com paixão e precisão* – Junte-se ao Professor Dejanir para aulas envolventes, dicas práticas e estratégias do mundo real para ajudá-lo a falar inglês fluente com confiança. Seja você um iniciante ou esteja aprimorando suas habilidades, nosso canal oferece aulas de inglês que são dinâmicas, relacionáveis e eficazes. 📢 *Inscreva-se agora* – Toque o sino e transforme seu inglês com o Professor de inglês Dejanir. Perfeito para alunos que desejam maneiras novas, divertidas e eficazes de *aprender inglês como um profissional! 🚀 *#AprendaInglês #InglêsFluente #ProfessorDeInglês #inglêsparainiciantes #AprendaInglês #InglêsFluente #ProfessorDeInglês #inglêsparainiciantes #learnEnglish #aprenderinglês #inglêsparainiciantes #cursodeinglês #englishteacher #englishteacher #teacherenglish #learnenglish #fluentenglish #speakfluentenglish #englishteacher #howtospeakenglish #englishlesson*