The document discusses the difference between the past simple and past continuous tenses. The past continuous is used to describe an action that was ongoing or in progress in the past. It is used when one action interrupted another ongoing action. The past simple is used for actions that occurred at a specific time or were brief. Examples are provided to illustrate using both tenses together to describe how a new, brief action interrupted an ongoing one.
The document discusses the difference between the past simple and past continuous tenses. The past continuous is used to describe an action that was ongoing or in progress in the past. It is used when one action interrupted another ongoing action. The past simple is used for actions that occurred at a specific time or were brief. Examples are provided to illustrate using both tenses together to describe how a new, brief action interrupted an ongoing one.
The document discusses the difference between the past simple and past continuous tenses. The past continuous is used to describe an action that was ongoing or in progress in the past. It is used when one action interrupted another ongoing action. The past simple is used for actions that occurred at a specific time or were brief. Examples are provided to illustrate using both tenses together to describe how a new, brief action interrupted an ongoing one.
Past Continuous • We use the past continuous for an action which was in progress in the past.
• Ex: He was walking in the street when it
started raining. • The first action is a long action - it lasted for a period of time. We therefore use the past continuous. • The second action is a short action that has interrupted the first. So for this we need past simple! I was watching television when he arrived. • Use: 1. After another or at the same time. • New action or already in progress. If you want to express that a new action happened in the middle of another action, you need both tenses: Simple Past the new action and Past Progressive for the action already in progress. • Only mentioning or emphasizing progress. Do you just want to mention that an action took place in the past (also used for short actions)? Or do you want to put emphasis on the progress, e.g. that an action was taking place at a certain time?