For continuous actions happening at a particular time in the past.
Useful vocabulary for continuous actions happening at a particular time in the past: this morning, yesterday, last night/week/month/year, two weeks ago, in (year)
To describe two or more actions happening at the same time in the past.
Useful vocabulary for actions happening simultaneously: while, as
Similarly, this is used to describe background events in stories.
For a background event that was interrupted by another event, combine it with the past simple.
For activities that were repeated a lot.
Useful vocabulary for activities that were repeated a lot: constantly, always, consistently, regularly, repeatedly, continually, perpetually
STRUCTURE
For positive sentences, use ‘was’ or ‘were’ after the pronoun, then add ‘-ing’ to the main verb.
For negative sentences, add ‘not’ after ‘was’ or ‘were’. We usually contract the form with an apostrophe.
To ask yes/no questions, change the order of the sentence so ‘was’ or ‘were’ is at the beginning.
To ask for more information, add the ‘who, what, where, why, how, when’ question words at the beginning.
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