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Rabu, 14 Oktober 2009

Simple Past Tense,Past Continuous Tense,Past Perfect Tense, and Past Perfect Continuous Tense

Simple Past Tense

I sang
The simple past tense is sometimes called the preterite tense. We can use several tenses to talk about the past, but the simple past tense is the one we use most often.

How do we make the Simple Past Tense?

To make the simple past tense, we use:
  • past form only
    or
  • auxiliary did + base form
Here you can see examples of the past form and base form for irregular verbs and regular verbs:

V1
base

V2
past

V3
past participle


regular verb
work
explode
like

worked
exploded
liked

worked
exploded
liked
The past form for all regular verbs ends in -ed.
irregular verb
go
see
sing

went
saw
sang

gone
seen
sung
The past form for irregular verbs is variable. You need to learn it by heart.

You do not need the past participle form to make the simple past tense. It is shown here for completeness only.

The structure for positive sentences in the simple past tense is:
subject
+
main verb


past
The structure for negative sentences in the simple past tense is:
subject
+
auxiliary verb
+
not
+
main verb


did



base
The structure for question sentences in the simple past tense is:
auxiliary verb
+
subject
+
main verb
did



base
The auxiliary verb did is not conjugated. It is the same for all persons (I did, you did, he did etc). And the base form and past form do not change. Look at these examples with the main verbs go and work:

subject
auxiliary verb

main verb

+
I


went
to school.
You


worked
very hard.
-
She
did
not
go
with me.
We
did
not
work
yesterday.
?
Did
you

go
to London?
Did
they

work
at home?
Exception! The verb to be is different. We conjugate the verb to be (I was, you were, he/she/it was, we were, they were); and we do not use an auxiliary for negative and question sentences. To make a question, we exchange the subject and verb. Look at these examples:

subject
main verb


+
I, he/she/it
was

here.
You, we, they
were

in London.
-
I, he/she/it
was
not
there.
You, we, they
were
not
happy.
?
Was
I, he/she/it

right?
Were
you, we, they

late?

How do we use the Simple Past Tense?

We use the simple past tense to talk about an action or a situation - an event - in the past. The event can be short or long.
Here are some short events with the simple past tense:
The car exploded at 9.30am yesterday.
She went to the door.
We did not hear the telephone.
Did you see that car?
past
present
future



The action is in the past.


Here are some long events with the simple past tense:
I lived in Bangkok for 10 years.
The Jurassic period lasted about 62 million years.
We did not sing at the concert.
Did you watch TV last night?
past
present
future



The action is in the past.


Notice that it does not matter how long ago the event is: it can be a few minutes or seconds in the past, or millions of years in the past. Also it does not matter how long the event is. It can be a few milliseconds (car explosion) or millions of years (Jurassic period). We use the simple past tense when:
  • the event is in the past
  • the event is completely finished
  • we say (or understand) the time and/or place of the event
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In general, if we say the time or place of the event, we must use the simple past tense; we cannot use the present perfect.
Here are some more examples:
  • I lived in that house when I was young.
  • He didn't like the movie.
  • What did you eat for dinner?
  • John drove to London on Monday.
  • Mary did not go to work yesterday.
  • Did you play tennis last week?
  • I was at work yesterday.
  • We were not late (for the train).
  • Were you angry?
Note that when we tell a story, we usually use the simple past tense. We may use the past continuous tense to "set the scene", but we almost always use the simple past tense for the action. Look at this example of the beginning of a story:
"The wind was howling around the hotel and the rain was pouring down. It was cold. The door opened and James Bond entered. He took off his coat, which was very wet, and ordered a drink at the bar. He sat down in the corner of the lounge and quietly drank his..."
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This page shows the use of the simple past tense to talk about past events. But note that there are some other uses for the simple past tense, for example in conditional or if sentences.

Simple Past Tense Quiz


1              I ... to the mall after school (went/gone)              
2              My brother …  a bear an hour ago.(saw/seen)
3              … Mike visit his grandmother last night?(did/are)            
4              Alex did not …  last weekend. (work/worked)   
5              … Judy and Liz at last month's meeting?(were/was)        
6              We …  not happy after the sad ending.(were/was)          
7              … you see Jody's new dog yesterday?(are/did)                
8              Sorry, I … hear you at the door.(wasn`t/didn`t)
9              I … English for two years.(study/studied)             
10           What  … you eat for lunch yesterday? (do/did)

Past Continuous Tense

I was singing
The past continuous tense is an important tense in English. We use it to say what we were in the middle of doing at a particular moment in the past.

How do we make the Past Continuous Tense?

The structure of the past continuous tense is:
subject
+
auxiliary verb BE
+
main verb

conjugated in simple past tense

present participle
was
were

base + ing
For negative sentences in the past continuous tense, we insert not between the auxiliary verb and main verb. For question sentences, we exchange the subject and auxiliary verb. Look at these example sentences with the past continuous tense:

subject
auxiliary verb

main verb

+
I
was

watching
TV.
+
You
were

working
hard.
-
He, she, it
was
not
helping
Mary.
-
We
were
not
joking.

?
Were
you

being
silly?
?
Were
they

playing
football?
How do we use the past continuous tense? »
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The spelling rules for adding ing to make the past continuous tense are the same as for the present continuous tense.

How do we use the Past Continuous Tense?

The past continuous tense expresses action at a particular moment in the past. The action started before that moment but has not finished at that moment. For example, yesterday I watched a film on TV. The film started at 7pm and finished at 9pm.
At 8pm yesterday, I was watching TV.
past
present
future

8pm

At 8pm, I was in the middle of watching TV.


When we use the past continuous tense, our listener usually knows or understands what time we are talking about. Look at these examples:
  • I was working at 10pm last night.
  • They were not playing football at 9am this morning.
  • What were you doing at 10pm last night?
  • What were you doing when he arrived?
  • She was cooking when I telephoned her.
  • We were having dinner when it started to rain.
  • Ram went home early because it was snowing.
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Some verbs cannot be used in continuous/progressive tenses.
We often use the past continuous tense to "set the scene" in stories. We use it to describe the background situation at the moment when the action begins. Often, the story starts with the past continuous tense and then moves into the simple past tense. Here is an example:
" James Bond was driving through town. It was raining. The wind was blowing hard. Nobody was walking in the streets. Suddenly, Bond saw the killer in a telephone box..."

Past Continuous Tense + Simple Past Tense

We often use the past continuous tense with the simple past tense. We use the past continuous tense to express a long action. And we use the simple past tense to express a short action that happens in the middle of the long action. We can join the two ideas with when or while.
In the following example, we have two actions:
  1. long action (watching TV), expressed with past continuous tense
  2. short action (telephoned), expressed with simple past tense
past
present
future
Long action.


I was watching TV at 8pm.

8pm




You telephoned at 8pm.
Short action.


We can join these two actions with when:
  • I was watching TV when you telephoned.
(Notice that "when you telephoned" is also a way of defining the time [8pm].)
We use:
  • when + short action (simple past tense)
  • while + long action (past continuous tense)
There are four basic combinations:

I was walking past the car
when
it exploded.
When
the car exploded

I was walking past it.

The car exploded
while
I was walking past it.
While
I was walking past the car

it exploded.
Notice that the long action and short action are relative.
  • "Watching TV" took a few hours. "Telephoned" took a few seconds.
  • "Walking past the car" took a few seconds. "Exploded" took a few milliseconds.

Past Perfect Tense

I had sung
The past perfect tense is quite an easy tense to understand and to use. This tense talks about the "past in the past".

How do we make the Past Perfect Tense?

The structure of the past perfect tense is:
subject
+
auxiliary verb HAVE
+
main verb

conjugated in simple past tense

past participle
had
V3
For negative sentences in the past perfect tense, we insert not between the auxiliary verb and main verb. For question sentences, we exchange the subject and auxiliary verb. Look at these example sentences with the past perfect tense:

subject
auxiliary verb

main verb

+
I
had

finished
my work.
+
You
had

stopped
before me.
-
She
had
not
gone
to school.
-
We
had
not
left.

?
Had
you

arrived?

?
Had
they

eaten
dinner?
When speaking with the past perfect tense, we often contract the subject and auxiliary verb:
I had
I'd
you had
you'd
he had
she had
it had
he'd
she'd
it'd
we had
we'd
they had
they'd
 
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The 'd contraction is also used for the auxiliary verb would. For example, we'd can mean:
  • We had
    or
  • We would
But usually the main verb is in a different form, for example:
  • We had arrived (past participle)
  • We would arrive (base)
It is always clear from the context.

How do we use the Past Perfect Tense?

The past perfect tense expresses action in the past before another action in the past. This is the past in the past. For example:
  • The train left at 9am. We arrived at 9.15am. When we arrived, the train had left.
The train had left when we arrived.
past
present
future
Train leaves in past at 9am.


9

9.15



We arrive in past at 9.15am.


Look at some more examples:
  • I wasn't hungry. I had just eaten.
  • They were hungry. They had not eaten for five hours.
  • I didn't know who he was. I had never seen him before.
  • "Mary wasn't at home when I arrived."
    "Really? Where had she gone?"
You can sometimes think of the past perfect tense like the present perfect tense, but instead of the time being now the time is past.
past perfect tense

present perfect tense
had |
done |
> |




have |
done |
> |




past
now
future

past
now
future
For example, imagine that you arrive at the station at 9.15am. The stationmaster says to you:
  • "You are too late. The train has left."
Later, you tell your friends:
  • "We were too late. The train had left."
We often use the past perfect tense in reported speech after verbs like said, told, asked, thought, wondered:
Look at these examples:
  • He told us that the train had left.
  • I thought I had met her before, but I was wrong.
  • He explained that he had closed the window because of the rain.
  • I wondered if I had been there before.
  • I asked them why they had not finished.

Past Perfect Continuous Tense

I had been singing

How do we make the Past Perfect Continuous Tense?

The structure of the past perfect continuous tense is:
subject
+
auxiliary verb HAVE
+
auxiliary verb BE
+
main verb

conjugated in simple past tense

past participle

present participle
had
been
base + ing
For negative sentences in the past perfect continuous tense, we insert not after the first auxiliary verb. For question sentences, we exchange the subject and first auxiliary verb. Look at these example sentences with the past perfect continuous tense:

subject
auxiliary verb

auxiliary verb
main verb

+
I
had

been
working.

+
You
had

been
playing
tennis.
-
It
had
not
been
working
well.
-
We
had
not
been
expecting
her.
?
Had
you

been
drinking?

?
Had
they

been
waiting
long?
When speaking with the past perfect continuous tense, we often contract the subject and first auxiliary verb:
I had been
I'd been
you had been
you'd been
he had
she had been
it had been
he'd been
she'd been
it'd been
we had been
we'd been
they had been
they'd been

How do we use the Past Perfect Continuous Tense?

The past perfect continuous tense is like the past perfect tense, but it expresses longer actions in the past before another action in the past. For example:
  • Ram started waiting at 9am. I arrived at 11am. When I arrived, Ram had been waiting for two hours.
Ram had been waiting for two hours when I arrived.
past
present
future
Ram starts waiting in past at 9am.


9

11

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I arrive in past at 11am.


Here are some more examples:
  • John was very tired. He had been running.
  • I could smell cigarettes. Somebody had been smoking.
  • Suddenly, my car broke down. I was not surprised. It had not been running well for a long time.
  • Had the pilot been drinking before the crash?
You can sometimes think of the past perfect continuous tense like the present perfect continuous tense, but instead of the time being now the time is past.
past perfect continuous tense

present perfect continuous tense
had |
been |
doing |
>>>> |
|
|
|
|


|
|
|
|
have |
been |
doing |
>>>> |




past
now
future

past
now
future
For example, imagine that you meet Ram at 11am. Ram says to you:
  • "I am angry. I have been waiting for two hours."
Later, you tell your friends:
  • "Ram was angry. He had been waiting for two hours."
Sumber = "http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/verb-tenses_past.htm"





 


1 Comment:

Achmad Dwi S on 17 Oktober 2009 pukul 10.00 mengatakan...

good

 

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