







In English we use the past simple tense to talk about finished actions in the past.
We use 'did' as an auxiliary verb in negatives and questions and we often use the past simple with past time phrases such as 5 minutes ago, yesterday, last week, in the 1980s, and when I was a child.
Notes for use of past simple :
In English, to change verbs to the past tense, we add '-ed' to regular verbs. For example;
work --> worked
live --> lived
walk --> walked
If the verb ends in 'e', we drop the 'e' before adding '-ed'. For example;
dance --> danced
smile --> smiled
phone --> phoned
If the verb ends in a vowel + consonant, we double the last consonant. For example;
stop --> stopped
tag --> tagged
plan --> planned
If the verb has more than one syllable, we double the consonant at the end only if the last syllable is stressed. For example;
prefer --> preferred
permit --> permitted
regret --> regretted
If the last syllable of the verb is not stressed, we do not double the last consonant. For example;
visit --> visited
happen --> happened
develop --> developed
In British English, verbs ending in 'l' double the 'l' before '-ed' whether the last syllable is stressed or not. For example;
travel --> travelled
cancel --> cancelled
If the verb ends in a 'y' or a 'w', we do not double it when we add '-ed'. For example;
stay --> stayed
play --> played
sew --> sewed
In English we do not double the consonant if the verb has two vowels before the last consonant. For example;
boil --> boiled
explain --> explained
In English we also do not double the consonant if the verb ends in two consonants. For example;
help --> helped
start --> started
However, irregular verbs change to completely different words in the past tense. For example;
go --> went
take --> took
know --> knew
The table below shows the different forms of past simple :
Example Verb : live | I / You / We / They / He / She / It |
| Positive | ... lived. |
| Negative | ... didn't live. |
Questions | Did ... live? |
| Short answers | Yes, ... did. / No, ... didn't. |
For the verb 'to be' we use 'was' and 'were'' in the past simple. No auxiliary verbs are used in negative sentences and questions.
Verb : Be | I / He / She / It | You / We / They |
| Positive | ... was ... | ... were ... |
| Negative | ... wasn't ... | ... weren't ... |
| Questions | Was ... ... ? | Were ... ...? |
| Short answers | Yes, ... was. / No, ... wasn't. | Yes, ... were. / No, ... weren't. |
Past Simple Example Sentences :
Positive Examples of Past Simple :
Negative Examples of Past Simple :
Question Examples of Past Simple :
| Past simple example sentences | |
|---|---|
| Anyway, I woke up at 07:00 and went to see the first one. | |
| I didn't want you to come out for a smoke, actually. | |
| Did you check the expiry date? | |
| I hope the other appointments weren't very far apart from each other. | |
| When I first came to England, I thought it was a holiday only for banks. | |
| Then when I got there, I called her again, but she didn't answer! | |
| You killed my favourite movie with one punch, dear! | |
| I don't know, did you check the expiry date? | |
| I went there, too, but they didn't have it, either. | |
| What brought you to London? | |
| And now you've woken me up just when I was about to sleep! | |
| Didn't I just say the same thing? | |
| I didn't realise there was a problem with the toilet! | |
| Plus you drank half of my bottle of wine! | |
| Sorry, Julianne, I didn't know you were still here. | |
| I came here to visit her, then she went back and I stayed here. | |
| Oh my god, I'm sorry dear, I got what you meant just now... | |
| I know, I also didn't expect it to be your favourite movie. | |
| Have fun, Diego, it was nice to meet you. | |
| Umm, she started staying with me recently. | |