Unit 6: Great achievers
Past simple
Select a unit
- 1 Nice to meet you!
- 2 What to wear
- 3 Like this, like that
- 4 The daily grind
- 5 Christmas every day
- 6 Great achievers
- 7 The Titanic
- 8 Travel
- 9 The big wedding
- 10 Sunny's job hunt
- 11 The bucket list
- 12 Moving and migration
- 13 Welcome to BBC Broadcasting House
- 14 New Year, New Project
- 15 From Handel to Hendrix
- 16 What's the weather like?
- 17 The Digital Revolution
- 18 A detective story
- 19 A place to live
- 20 The Cult of Celebrity
- 21 Welcome to your new job
- 22 Beyond the planets
- 23 Great expectations!
- 24 Eco-tourism
- 25 Moving house
- 26 It must be love
- 27 Job hunting success... and failure
- 28 Speeding into the future
- 29 Lost arts
- 30 Tales of survival
Grammar Reference
Past simple - Meaning and use
We use the past simple when an action or situation happens and finishes in the past. We usually say or know when it happened.
She called me at the office yesterday.
I worked in London in 2010.
Steve went to the US three times last year.
We often use the past simple in stories, when one thing happens after another in the past.
I stopped working in London and I looked for another job.
Past simple positive
For regular verbs, the past simple ends in -ed. Irregular verbs have a different past form. The past simple form is the same for all persons (I, you, he, she, etc.)
I finished university in 2010 and I started a job in a bank.
Then he left that job and went to live in Japan.
We lived there for a year.
Past simple negative
We make the negative form with didn’t (did not) + infinitive without ‘to’.
I didn’t like working in a bank.
He didn’t go to the US. He went to Japan.
Past simple questions
Past simple wh-word questions are made from question word + did + subject + infinitive.
Where did you go last night?
The question word how is usually combined with other words when asking for information, such as size, time, or the price of something.
How long did it take to cook dinner?
Past simple yes/no questions are made from did + subject + infinitive without ‘to’.
Did you like living in Japan?
What did your children do there?
We can use short answers:
Did you go to Anjali’s party last night? Yes, I did. / No, I didn’t.
Take note: spelling changes
Some regular verbs end in -ed, but have some spelling changes in the past simple.
stop – stopped
travel – travelled
marry – married
study - studied
Take note: time expressions
We often use the past simple with time expressions like yesterday, last month, six years ago, when I was a child.
Did you travel a lot when you were young?
He married Sonya three years ago.
Irregular verbs
Infinitive - Past simple - Past participle
fall - fell - fallen
feel - felt - felt
get - got - got
go - went - gone/been
have - had - had
hurt - hurt - hurt
keep - kept - kept
put - put - put
run - ran - run
take - took - taken
tell - told - told