My brother got a
new job in Madrid last week.
What did he say when you told him?
Shakespeare died in 1616.
to talk about
habits in the past:
We always had roast
beef on Sundays when I was a boy.
We never went abroad for our holidays until
the 1970s.
I travelled by bus until I passed my driving
test.
to talk about
events that happened one after the other:
He jumped out
of bed, ran into the bathroom and slammed the
door.
I came, I saw,
I conquered.
Past
continuous
The past
continuous is used:
to talk about
an activity in progress at a particular time in the past:
What were
you doing at 9 o'clock on the night of the murder?
At 9 o'clock I was getting the dinner ready.
At 2 o'clock everyone was having lunch.
to describe
a situation or activity:
Cars were
speeding past and people were hurrying towards
the station.
It was raining so hard that everyone was
sheltering in doorways.
He was wearing his best suit.
when a past
action is interrupted by a shorter action:
I was
walking along the road when it started to
rain.
Someone knocked on the door as I was
getting dressed.
I was wondering what to do when the phone rang.
when a past
action takes place during another, longer past action or state:
She was
living in Madrid when she met her
husband.
I decided to give up smoking while I was
working in the hospital.
I was learning Arabic when I got the
chance to visit Egypt.
Past
simple and past continuous
As far as
Spanish speakers are concerned, the main thing that you should remember
is that you have more verb tenses in Spanish than we have in English.
trabajé
I worked
trabajaba
-----
estaba
trabajando
I was
working
estuve
trabajando
-----
Even though
it might sound strange to you, you need to use the correct English
tense according to the rules. Look at the following examples which
could help:
When we arrived she made some
tea. (One action followed another)
When we arrived she was
making some tea. (She was in the middle of making it)
I painted the
living room yesterday. (I finished it)
I was painting the living room yesterday, (I
did part of it)
He drowned.
(He's dead)
He was drowning. (I jumped in and saved him)
He hit his
brother. (Single action)
He was hitting his brother. (Repeated activity)
The old
pub stood by the river near the bridge.
(Permanent)
He was standing outside the pub waiting for
it to open. (Temporary)
Past
perfect simple and continuous
The past
perfect simple expresses an action that happened before a definite
time in the past:
I got to
his house at 10 o'clock, but he had already
left.
She started to cry because she had
had such a terrible day.
I asked him if he wanted a
coffee but he had already had one.
The continuous
is used for longer activities that had been going on up to a definite
time in the past:
He was a
wreck. He hadn't been sleeping well
because he'd been worrying so much
about his money problems.
The continous
is used for repeated or continuous activities, while the simple is
used for completed or single actions:
He was drunk.
He had been drinking all day. (Repeated
activity)
He was drunk. He had drunk a
whole bottle of whisky. (Completed action)
Past
perfect and past simple
The past
simple can tell a story in chronological order:
She was all
alone in the world. Her parents got divorced when
she was a girl, her sister got married and went to
live in Canada, and her boyfriend left her
after five years of living together.
The past
perfect can be used for dramatic effect, looking from one point in
the past to another point even further in the past:
She was all
alone in the world. Her parents had got divorced when
she was a girl, her sister had got married and gone to
live in Canada, and her boyfriend had left her
after five years of living together.
The past
simple can be used when one action follows another and it's obvious
that it happened afterwards:
When the
doorbell rang I got
up to answer it.
I heard the milkman and went to
order an extra carton of milk.
If it's important
to show that the second action started after the first one was completed,
the first action must be in the past perfect:
When I had
finished reading the paper, I threw it
away.
I didn't leave the house until I had
made sure that all the windows were closed.