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The Past Perfect is a grammatical tense used to express an action or event that occurred before another specific past event. It is usually formed using the auxiliary "had" followed by the past participle of the main verb.
Here is an example of the grammatical structure of the Past Perfect:
Subject + had + past participle of the main verb
Example:
She had already finished her homework before her friends arrived.
In this example, "had finished" is the Past Perfect, indicating that the action of finishing the homework occurred before the friends arrived.
The Past Perfect is often used in conjunction with another past tense, usually the Past Simple, to clearly indicate the order of past events. When you have two actions in the past and you want to indicate that one happened before the other, you use the Past Perfect for the first action.
Here is an example of using the Past Perfect with the Past Simple:
When I arrived at the party, Sarah had already left.
In this example, "had left" is the Past Perfect, indicating that the action of leaving occurred before arriving at the party (indicated by "arrived", which is in the Past Simple).
The Past Perfect is also used in type 3 conditional sentences to express an unrealizable past condition.
Example:
If I had known you were coming, I would have baked a cake.
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