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Understanding and correctly using verb tenses is one of the most important grammar skills tested in the Civil Service Exam. Many examinees lose easy points not because they lack vocabulary, but because they confuse verb forms, mix timelines, or fail to maintain tense consistency within a sentence or paragraph. This guide provides a comprehensive explanation of English tenses, their correct usage, and common mistakes—specifically tailored for Civil Service Exam preparation.
Verb tense questions appear frequently in:
Sentence completion
Error identification
Reading comprehension
Paragraph organization
The exam tests not only your knowledge of tense forms, but also your ability to understand time relationships, context clues, and logical consistency. Even a grammatically correct tense can be wrong if it does not fit the situation described.
English has three main time frames:
Past
Present
Future
Each time frame includes several aspects that show how an action happens in time.
The main tense categories tested in the Civil Service Exam are:
Simple
Progressive (Continuous)
Perfect
Perfect Progressive
You do not need to memorize all technical names, but you must understand when and why each tense is used.
Base verb (or base + s/es for third-person singular)
The simple present tense is used to express:
General truths
Habits and routines
Facts
Fixed schedules
The sun rises in the east.
She works at the city hall.
The office opens at 8:00 a.m.
Forgetting the -s / -es for third-person singular
Incorrect: She work in finance.
Correct: She works in finance.
am / is / are + verb-ing
Used for:
Actions happening right now
Temporary situations
Ongoing actions around the present time
The clerk is processing the application.
They are reviewing the documents this week.
Using progressive tense for permanent facts
Incorrect: He is knowing the rules.
Correct: He knows the rules.
(“Know,” “believe,” “own,” and similar verbs are non-progressive.)
Regular verbs: verb + -ed
Irregular verbs: unique past forms
Used for:
Actions completed at a specific time in the past
Events that are clearly finished
She submitted the report yesterday.
He took the exam last year.
Using present tense when a past time marker is present
Incorrect: He submits the form yesterday.
Correct: He submitted the form yesterday.
was / were + verb-ing
Used to show:
An ongoing action in the past
A background action interrupted by another event
She was answering calls when the system crashed.
They were waiting for the announcement.
Confusing simple past and past progressive
Incorrect: He worked when the phone rang.
Correct: He was working when the phone rang.
has / have + past participle
Used to express:
Actions that happened at an unspecified time in the past
Actions that started in the past and continue to the present
Past actions with present relevance
She has completed the training.
They have lived here for ten years.
Using simple past with “for” or “since”
Incorrect: He lived here since 2015.
Correct: He has lived here since 2015.
has / have been + verb-ing
Used to emphasize:
Duration of an action that started in the past and continues now
She has been studying for the exam all week.
They have been working overtime.
Overusing this tense when duration is not emphasized
Incorrect: I have been knowing her for years.
Correct: I have known her for years.
had + past participle
Used to show:
An action completed before another past action
She had finished the report before the meeting started.
He had left when the announcement was made.
Using simple past instead of past perfect when sequence matters
Incorrect: She finished the report before the meeting started.
Correct: She had finished the report before the meeting started.
had been + verb-ing
Used to show:
Duration of an action that was ongoing before another past event
He had been waiting for hours before his name was called.
They had been discussing the issue when the decision arrived.
Using it unnecessarily when simple past is sufficient
will + base verb
Used for:
Decisions made at the moment of speaking
Predictions
Promises
I will submit the form tomorrow.
She will assist you with your request.
Confusing “will” with “going to”
In the exam, will is more commonly tested.
will be + verb-ing
Used to express:
Actions that will be ongoing at a specific future time
They will be conducting interviews next week.
She will be attending the seminar tomorrow.
will have + past participle
Used to show:
An action that will be completed before a future point
He will have completed the exam by noon.
They will have finished the project by Friday.
One of the most common Civil Service Exam errors is shifting tenses without reason.
She entered the office and checks the documents.
She entered the office and checked the documents.
Once a tense is established, maintain it unless there is a clear time shift.
Time markers often determine the correct tense:
Yesterday, last night, last year → Simple Past
Now, currently, at the moment → Present Progressive
For, since, already, yet → Present Perfect
Before, after, by the time → Past Perfect or Future Perfect
Recognizing these words is essential for fast and accurate answers.
Mixing present and past without reason
Ignoring time expressions
Misusing perfect tenses
Using progressive tense with stative verbs
Forgetting subject-verb agreement within tense forms
Identify time markers first
Determine the main timeline (past, present, future)
Check verb form consistency
Eliminate choices that break logical sequence
Choose clarity over complexity
Often, the simplest tense is the correct one.
Correct usage of tenses is not about memorizing long grammar rules—it is about understanding time, sequence, and logic. In the Civil Service Exam, tense questions are designed to test precision, not creativity. By mastering tense forms, recognizing time clues, and maintaining consistency, you significantly improve your accuracy and overall exam score.
Consistent practice with real exam-style questions will reinforce these rules and help you apply them confidently on test day.
Choose the correct verb form to complete each sentence.
She usually ______ the office before 8:00 a.m.
a) arrive
b) arrives
c) arrived
d) has arrived
The committee ______ the proposal yesterday.
a) approves
b) has approved
c) approved
d) will approve
When the phone rang, he ______ a report.
a) writes
b) was writing
c) has written
d) wrote
They ______ in Cebu for ten years.
a) live
b) lived
c) are living
d) have lived
By the time the meeting starts, the secretary ______ the minutes.
a) prepares
b) will prepare
c) will have prepared
d) prepared
Choose the sentence that uses verb tenses correctly.
a) She was knowing the rules before the exam.
b) She knows the rules before the exam.
c) She has been knowing the rules before the exam.
d) She is knowing the rules before the exam.
a) He submitted the form since last week.
b) He has submitted the form last week.
c) He submitted the form last week.
d) He has submit the form last week.
a) They were discussing the issue when the decision arrived.
b) They discussed the issue when the decision arrived.
c) They are discussing the issue when the decision arrived.
d) They have discussed the issue when the decision arrived.
a) She enters the office and checked the files.
b) She entered the office and checks the files.
c) She entered the office and checked the files.
d) She enters the office and checking the files.
a) The applicant will finish the exam by noon.
b) The applicant will have finished the exam by noon.
c) The applicant finishes the exam by noon.
d) The applicant has finished the exam by noon.
Each sentence contains an error in verb tense. Identify the incorrect verb.
He has completed the training yesterday.
She was answering calls and submits reports at the same time.
They have lived here since five years.
When the announcement was made, the staff leave the hall.
The officer is handling this case for ten years.
Choose the option that best corrects the tense error.
She finish the report before the deadline.
a) She finishes the report before the deadline.
b) She finished the report before the deadline.
c) She has finish the report before the deadline.
d) She finishing the report before the deadline.
He is working in this department since 2020.
a) He worked in this department since 2020.
b) He works in this department since 2020.
c) He has been working in this department since 2020.
d) He was working in this department since 2020.
The applicants wait when their names were called.
a) The applicants waited when their names were called.
b) The applicants were waiting when their names were called.
c) The applicants are waiting when their names were called.
d) The applicants have waited when their names were called.
Choose the best answer.
Before she ______ the office, she ______ the lights.
a) left / turned off
b) leaves / turned off
c) left / turns off
d) leaves / turns off
By next month, they ______ the new system.
a) implement
b) implemented
c) will implement
d) will have implemented
b) arrives
c) approved
b) was writing
d) have lived
c) will have prepared
b) She knows the rules before the exam.
c) He submitted the form last week.
a) They were discussing the issue when the decision arrived.
c) She entered the office and checked the files.
b) The applicant will have finished the exam by noon.
has completed → should be completed
submits → should be submitted
have lived → should be have been living or have lived for five years
leave → should be left
is handling → should be has been handling
b) She finished the report before the deadline.
c) He has been working in this department since 2020.
b) The applicants were waiting when their names were called.
a) left / turned off
d) will have implemented
Civil Service Exam Philippines: Complete Preparation and Passing Guide