Lately: A Key Time Expression
1 π Why This Word Matters
Lately is a very useful word to talk about things that happen in the recent past. English speakers use it often to describe new habits or changes in their lives. It helps you talk about what is different now compared to before.
2 π§ What It Really Means
1. In the recent past, in these days [I’ve been tired lately]
2. During the past few weeks or months [He hasn’t called lately]
3 β Use Lately Like This
– I haven’t seen Tom lately. He must be very busy.
– Sarah has been going to the gym a lot lately.
4 β οΈ Don't Make this mistake…
β I am lately very busy (wrong)
Put ‘lately’ at the end of the sentence, not at the start.
5 π§ Quick Grammar Guide
Use ‘lately’ with:
1. Present Perfect Simple negative: haven’t/hasn’t + verb + lately
2. Present Perfect Continuous: have/has been + verb-ing + lately
6 π§ An Interesting Thing About Lately
The word ‘lately’ comes from ‘late’ meaning ‘recent’ – not the opposite of ‘early’! This helps explain why we use it to talk about recent times.
7 π Want to Learn More?
Click on the Cards below to take a deeper dive into Lately