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What is the usual reason you should use the helping verb “had” in a complete verb?

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What is the usual reason you should use the helping verb “had” in a complete verb?

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The pluperfect tense (from Latin: plus quam perfectum more than perfect) is a perfective tense that exists in most Indo-European languages, used to refer to an event that has completed before another past action. In the sentence “The blind man, who knew that he had risen, motioned him to sit down again” (from Charles Dickens, Barnaby Rudge), “he had risen” is an example of the pluperfect tense. It refers to an event (someone rises from his seat), which takes place before another event (the blind man notices the fact that the other has risen). Since that second event (the blind man’s taking notice) is itself a past event and the past tense is used to refer to it (“the blind man knew”), the pluperfect is needed to make it clear that the first event (someone rises) has taken place even earlier in the past. There are generally two types of pluperfect, corresponding to the two types of perfect: * Pluperfect of state, where the consequence of some event is associated to that event during a r

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