Perfect to say that you have just done something. Form: S + have / has + just + PP Eg. I have just baked a cake. She has just called me. He has just eaten lunch. We have just studied Present Perfect. I’ve just said so!
Yet => is used to talk about something that is
expected to happen soon. It is used with questions and negative sentences.
S+ haven’t / hasn’t + PP + O + yet. (negative
sentence) Eg. I haven’t been to Costa Rica yet. Have/Has+S+PP+O+yet? (question) Eg. Have you eaten lunch yet? Yes, I have. / No, I haven’t. Still – is used to talk about something that hasn’t finished yet; you’re still doing something. It can be used in many tenses in English, not just Present Perfect. Eg. Have you finished reading Harry Potter yet? No, I’m still reading it. No, I still haven’t finished it. Have you learnt Present Perfect yet? No, I am still learning. No, I still haven’t finished (studying it).
Already -> is used to say that something has
already happened, earlier than expected. An action is finished. Form1: S+have/has+already+PP Eg. I have already studied Present Perfect. Form 2: S+have/has+PP+already. I have studied resent Perfect already. Practice makes you perfect. I’m starving – I am very hungry To starve – to be very hungry