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"Was able to" and "Have been able to"

Question
"Was able to" and "Have been able to"
Answer

A reader asks when to use "was able to" and when to use "have been able to." 

Editor Kory Stamper explains.

Was and have been are two different tenses of the verb be. There are twelve standard tenses in English, but these examples only touch on two of them: the past tense and the present perfect tense

The past tense (sometimes also called the simple past tense) describes action that started and ended before the time you are speaking of. Was is first person (or third person) past tense. Use it when you want to say that someone or something started (and completed) an action in the past:

I was able to fix the faucet and now it's fine.

(In this sentence, the faucet was fixed sometime before the time being spoken of).

The present perfect tense (sometimes also called the perfect tense) describes action that started before the time you are speaking of, but ends in the time you are speaking of. Have been is in the present perfect tense. Use it when you want to say that someone or something started an action in the past and finished it in the time being spoken of:

I have been able to visit them regularly.

(In this sentence, the speaker started visiting them sometime in the past and is still visiting them at the time being spoken of).

"Able to (do something)" doesn't affect the verb tense.

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