Past Tenses
Past Tenses
Past Tenses
We use didn’t (did not) to make negatives with the past tense:
They didn’t go to Spain this year.
We didn’t get home until very late last night.
I didn’t see you yesterday.
Regular verbs (exercise)
Regular verbs (exercise)
Regular verbs (negative sentences)
Regular verbs (interrogative sentences)
Irregular verbs
The negatives are all formed with did + not + the infinitive without to. The
question forms are very similar: did + subject pronoun + the infinitive
without to.
We didn't think you would get home in time for your birthday.
Irregular verbs - Verb TO BE
The past form is was for I, he, she and it, but were for you, we and they.
TO GO
TO GIVE
■ We gave her a doll for her birthday.
■ They didn't give John their new address.
■ Did Barry give you my passport?
Some irregular verbs
TO COME
● Make cards to test yourself – put the infinitive on one side and the past on the
other.
● Write sentences with different verbs in them. Include some negatives.
● Make up stories and record yourself. The story could just be about what you
did last weekend.
● Do practice activities online.
Conversation
1. Tell me about your last vacation. Where did you go? What did you do?
2. What did you do for you last birthday?
3. What was the last really difficult thing you had to do?
4. What did you eat for you last meal?
5. Who did you meet last week? What did you do together?
6. Tell me about what you did for the last 24 hours.
7. When was the last time you were really excited about something?
Conversation
Past continuous
The past continuous (also called past progressive) is a verb tense which is
used to show that an ongoing past action was happening at a specific
moment of interruption, or that two ongoing actions were happening at the
same time.
What were you doing at 8 o’clock last night? I was watching television. (I started
watching television before 8 o’clock and I continued watching it after 8 o’clock).
e.g.
"The sun was shining and the birds were singing as the elephant came out of
the jungle. The other animals were relaxing in the shade of the trees, but the
elephant moved very quickly. She was looking for her baby, and she didn't
notice the hunter who was watching her through his binoculars. When the
shot rang out, she was running towards the river..."
USES:
Temporary habits or habits that happen more often than we expect in the
past. We often use 'always', 'constantly' or 'forever' here. This is the same as
the way we use the present continuous for habits, but the habit started and
finished in the past. This thing doesn't happen now.
To emphasise that something lasted for a while. This use is often optional
and we usually use it with time expressions like 'all day' or 'all evening' or
'for hours'.
e.g. "I was having a beautiful dream when the alarm clock rang."
Past Continuous Forms
sleeping
She was sleeping on the sofa.
She was
(ella) Estaba durmiendo en el sofá.
sleeping
was not She wasn't sleeping on the sofa.
She
wasn't (ella) No estaba durmiendo en el sofá.
sleeping?
Was she sleeping on the sofa?
Was she
(ella) ¿Estaba durmiendo en el sofá?