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2.4 Past perfect

Form: past perfect

had + past participle

The past perfect is formed with had + the past participle form of the verb.

Affirmative

SubjectAuxiliaryVerb (past participle) 
I
You
He/She/It
We
You
They
had arrived by then.

The following contracted forms are often used in spoken and in informal written language:

I had » I'd
you had » you'd
he/she/it had » he'd/she'd/it'd
we had » we'd
you had » you'd
they had »
they'd

Negative

SubjectAuxiliarynotVerb (past participle) 
I
You
He/She/It
We
You
They
had not arrived by then.

The contracted form hadn't is often used instead of had not in spoken and in informal written language.

Interrogative

(Question word)AuxiliarySubjectVerb (past participle) 
(Why) had I
you
he/she/it
we
you
they
arrived by then?

Past perfect for actions completed before a point in the past

The past perfect tense is used to express that an action was completed before a point in time in the past. This point can be implied or expressed with a time expression or a clause with a verb in the past simple tense:

They had all arrived by 10 o'clock.
When he tried to stand up, he realised he had broken his ankle.

Contrary to a common misunderstanding, the past perfect does not express that something happened a very long time ago. What it expresses is not how long ago an event happened but rather that it happened earlier than something else:

Julius Caesar attacked Britain in 54 BC. (This was quite a long time ago; still, the past simple tense is used here.)
When I got home, they had already eaten everything in the house. (Maybe this only happened yesterday, but the point is that the eating happened before my arrival.)

Expressions which are often used with the past perfect tense: by, till, until, before, when, by the time, no sooner, hardly, scarcely, barely.

Danny had never seen a real cow till I showed him one last Friday.
He didn't leave until he had talked with the boss.
By the time she got to the theatre, the play had already begun.
I had no sooner got home than the telephone rang.

I had hardly/barely/scarcely fallen asleep when there was an earthquake.

Past perfect with FOR

The preposition for is used with the past perfect tense to express that something started before a point in time in the past and was still true at that point:

When they got married, they had already been together for three years.