Simple Past Tense - EF - Global Site
Simple Past Tense - EF - Global Site
Simple Past Tense - EF - Global Site
The simple past tense, sometimes called the preterite, is used to talk about a completed
action in a time before now. The simple past is the basic form of past tense in English. The
time of the action can be in the recent past or the distant past and action duration is not
important.
Examples
You always use the simple past when you say when something happened, so it is
associated with certain past time expressions
frequency: often, sometimes, always
I sometimes walked home at lunchtime.
I often brought my lunch to school.
a definite point in time: last week, when I was a child, yesterday, six weeks ago
We saw a good film last week.
Yesterday, I arrived in Geneva.
Note: the word ago is a useful way of expressing the distance into the past. It is placed
after the period of time: a week ago, three years ago, a minute ago.
Be Careful: The simple past in English may look like a tense in your own language, but the
meaning may be different.
Affirmative
Subject + verb + ed
I skipped.
Negative
Interrogative
Interrogative negative
To Walk
Subject Verb
Be Have Do
Affirmative
The affirmative of the simple past tense is simple.
The interrogative form of "have" in the simple past normally uses the auxiliary "did".
Examples
Note: For the negative and interrogative form of all verbs in the simple past, always use the
auxiliary 'did''.
Some verbs are irregular in the simple past. Here are the most common ones.
to go
to give
to come
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