Skip to main content

still, yet and already: time

Meanings

Still, yet and already can all be used to talk about things which are going on, or expected, around the present. Briefly:

  • still is used to say that something is continuing and has not stopped
  • yet is used to talk about something that is expected
  • already is used to say that something has happened early, or earlier than it might have happened.

still

Still is used to say that something has, perhaps surprisingly, not finished.

  • She’s still asleep.
  • Is it still raining?
  • I’ve been thinking for hours, but I still can’t decide.
  • You’re not still seeing that Jackson boy, are you?

Still usually goes with the verb, in ‘mid-position’ (see here).

yet

Not yet is used to say that something which is expected has not happened (but we think that it will).

  • ‘Is Sophie here?’ ‘Not yet.’
  • The mail hasn’t come yet.

In questions, we use yet to ask whether something expected has happened.

  • Is supper ready yet?
  • Has the mail come yet?

Yet usually goes at the end of a clause, but it can go immediately after not in a formal style.

  • Don’t eat the pears – they aren’t ripe yet.
  • The pears are not yet ripe. (more formal)

already

Already is used to say that something has happened earlier than expected, or earlier than it might have happened.

  • ‘When’s Sophie going to come?’ ‘She’s already here.’
  • ‘You must go to Scotland.’ ‘I’ve already been there.’
  • Have you already finished? That was quick!

Already usually goes with the verb, in ‘mid-position’ (see here). It can also go at the end of a clause, for emphasis.

  • Are you here already? You must have run all the way.

We do not usually put already before time expressions.

  • When I was fourteen I already knew that I wanted to be a doctor. (not Already when I was fourteen …)

still not or not yet?

Still not looks back towards the past; not yet looks towards the future.

Compare:

  • She still hasn’t got a job. (Looking back: she hasn’t had a job for a long time, and this situation is continuing.)
    She hasn’t got a job yet. (Looking forward: she hasn’t got a job now, but we’re hoping that she will get one.)
  • I still can’t speak Russian, after all these years of study.
    I can’t speak French yet, but I hope I will be able to soon.

yet or already in questions

Questions with already often suggest that something has happened. Compare:

  • Have you met Professor Hawkins yet? (= I don’t know whether you’ve met him.)
    Have you already met Professor Hawkins? (= I think you’ve probably met him.)
  • Is my coat dry yet?
    Is my coat dry already? That was quick!

Tenses

Various tenses are possible with all three words. In British English, perfect tenses are common with already and yet; Americans often use past tenses. Compare:

  • Have you paid yet? (BrE)
    Have you paid / Did you pay yet? (AmE)
  • She has already left. (BrE)
    She (has) already left. (AmE)

All three words can be related to a past moment instead of to the present.

  • I went to see if she had woken up yet, but she was still asleep. This was embarrassing, because her friends had already arrived.

yet meaning ‘still’

Yet is normally used in questions and negative sentences. But it is sometimes used in affirmative sentences in a formal style to mean ‘still’.

  • We have yet to hear from the bank. (= We are still waiting to hear …)

all ready

All ready is not the same as already: it simply means the same as all + ready. Compare:

  • ‘When’s Megan coming?’ ‘She’s already arrived.’
  • ‘Are you all ready?’ ‘No, Dan isn’t.’
note

For still as a discourse marker meaning ‘however’, (see here).