1008 - Why Americans Say “I Already Ate” - Simple Past vs Present Perfect episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 11, 2026 · 10 MIN

1008 - Why Americans Say “I Already Ate” - Simple Past vs Present Perfect

from Happy English Podcast · host Michael DiGiacomo Happy English

Have you ever studied the present perfect in English and thought… “Okay… I understand the rule… but nobody actually talks like this.” Maybe your textbook says something like:  “You must use the present perfect for actions that happened at an unspecified time in the past.” So the example sentence is something like:  “I have eaten lunch.” And technically… that sentence is perfectly correct. But if you walk into an office in New York and someone asks you, “Hey, do you want to grab lunch?” most people are not going to say, “No thank you, I have eaten lunch.” They’re going to say something like: “No thanks, I already ate.” So what happened to the present perfect? English textbooks often teach the perfect present grammar… but in real conversations Americans tend to use the simple past. And that’s what today’s podcast English lesson is all about. Today we’re going to look at several very practical situations where native speakers naturally use the simple past tense in everyday conversational American English - even in situations where a textbook might tell you to use the present perfect. Now don’t get me wrong. The present perfect is still correct, and native speakers definitely use it. And if you'd like to learn more about the present perfect, check out Episode 753. But in fast, casual conversation, we often simplify things.  And when we do that… the simple past shows up everywhere.The Happy English PodcastHelping people speak English better since 2014Over 1,000 episodes • 8 million downloads📘 Get free weekly English lessons plus instant access to my FREE Vocabulary Workshop.:https://learn.myhappyenglish.com/free-english-lessons🎥 Watch video versions of the Happy English Podcast on YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/@HappyEnglishNY/podcasts🌐 Learn more about my English lessons and courseshttps://www.myhappyenglish.com

Have you ever studied the present perfect in English and thought… “Okay… I understand the rule… but nobody actually talks like this.” Maybe your textbook says something like:  “You must use the present perfect for actions that happened at an unspecified time in the past.” So the example sentence is something like:  “I have eaten lunch.” And technically… that sentence is perfectly correct. But if you walk into an office in New York and someone asks you, “Hey, do you want to grab lunch?” most people are not going to say, “No thank you, I have eaten lunch.” They’re going to say something like: “No thanks, I already ate.” So what happened to the present perfect? English textbooks often teach the perfect present grammar… but in real conversations Americans tend to use the simple past. And that’s what today’s podcast English lesson is all about. Today we’re going to look at several very practical situations where native speakers naturally use the simple past tense in everyday conversational American English - even in situations where a textbook might tell you to use the present perfect. Now don’t get me wrong. The present perfect is still correct, and native speakers definitely use it. And if you'd like to learn more about the present perfect, check out Episode 753. But in fast, casual conversation, we often simplify things.  And when we do that… the simple past shows up everywhere.The Happy English PodcastHelping people speak English better since 2014Over 1,000 episodes • 8 million downloads📘 Get free weekly English lessons plus instant access to my FREE Vocabulary Workshop.:https://learn.myhappyenglish.com/free-english-lessons🎥 Watch video versions of the Happy English Podcast on YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/@HappyEnglishNY/podcasts🌐 Learn more about my English lessons and courseshttps://www.myhappyenglish.com

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1008 - Why Americans Say “I Already Ate” - Simple Past vs Present Perfect

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This episode was published on March 11, 2026.

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Have you ever studied the present perfect in English and thought… “Okay… I understand the rule… but nobody actually talks like this.” Maybe your textbook says something like:  “You must use the present perfect for actions that happened at an...

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