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  • Narrative tenses – all past tenses

    Exercise 3

    Fill in the gaps with the most appropriate narrative tenses of the verbs in brackets: past simple, past continuous, past perfect simple or past perfect continuous.

    We thought that we were on the right path when suddenly we 1  (run into) a very familiar rock and 2  (realise) that we 3  (walk) in circles for quite a long time. We 4 (be) totally lost, and the fact that we 5  (already/finish) our water provisions wasn't very promising.

    We 6  (decide) to go uphill because according to John, it would be easier to spot a way out from an elevated point. He 7  (learn) that from a documentary he 8  (see) about survival. But what the documentary 9  (not teach) John was that maybe it’s not such a good idea to go up a mountain when you are exhausted and waterless.

    We 10  (trek) one mile when we 11  (start) to have a horrible feeling that that might be our last trek. Of course, we 12  (say) anything, but we could see in each other’s eyes that at that precise moment we 13  (think) precisely the same. We couldn't walk any longer, so we 14  (decide) to sit and rest, quietly, because neither of us wanted to share any of our gloomy thoughts.

    "Hello, can I help you?" we suddenly 15  (hear). We 16  (raise) our heads and 17 (see) a little man with slanted eyes and a childish grin. He 18  (stand) right next to us. I wondered where he 19 (come) from and how long he 20 (stand) there. But it didn't matter really, because we were safe.


     

  • Narrative tenses – all past tenses

    Infographic explaining all narrative tenses in English grammar, including past simple, past continuous, past perfect simple, and past perfect continuous with examples and uses, such as completed actions, habits, durations, and events in chronological order.

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    Past simple

    We use the past simple to talk about past events in chronological order, i.e. for a story’s main events.

    • When she opened the door, she pretended we weren’t there and went to her room. 
    • He called me and told me to go, but he wasn’t there when I arrived

    We also use the past simple to talk about past habits or past states.

    • We often went to the bar for a drink before dinner.
    • He really liked sport and was very fit.

    Past continuous

    We use the past continuous to set the scene in a story.

    • Last night, I was walking home listening to my iPod when…
    • The sun was shining, and lots of tourists were lying on the beach. Suddenly…

    We use the past continuous for actions in progress in the past or longer actions interrupted by shorter actions in the past simple.

    • After dinner, I went into the living room and saw that she was crying
    • When she opened the door, we were talking about her. 

    Past perfect simple

    We use the past perfect simple to talk about an earlier past: events which happened before the main event.

    Earlier single events

    We use the past perfect simple to talk about earlier events and experiences or single actions completed earlier in the past.

    • When she opened the door, he had already left.  
    • I realised that I had been there before. 
    • When I met her, I had never been in a serious relationship. 
    • He noticed I had cleaned the car. It was smooth and shiny. 

    We use the past perfect simple (and not continuous) to say how much or how many we had done of something earlier in the past.

    • We had driven 500 miles, and we needed some rest. 
    • How many hours had he slept when you woke him up?

    Duration from earlier in the past (stative verbs)

    We use the past perfect simple with stative verbs to talk about states or situations that had started earlier in the past. We often use how long, for or since, always, etc.

    • The day Anne died, they had been married for 48 years. 
    • The day I left, I had been in England for exactly four years. 
    • She told me she had always hated her sister. 

    Past perfect continuous

    Duration from earlier in the past (dynamic verbs)

    We use the past perfect continuous with dynamic verbs to talk about longer continuous actions that started earlier in the past than the main events of the story.

    • I was furious. I had been waiting for him in the cold, and he didn’t call to say he’d be late. 
    • We had been driving for less than an hour when the car broke down. 

    Repeated actions from earlier in the past (dynamic verbs)

    We use the past perfect continuous with dynamic verbs to talk about repeated actions from earlier in the past.

    • I couldn’t believe it. She had been writing a letter every day for over a year. 
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