NARRATIVE VERB FORMS

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NARRATIVE VERB FORMS
A brief overview
Which tenses/forms do we use to
express the PAST in English?
•
•
•
•
•
•
Past Simple
Past Continuous
Past Perfect Simple
Past Perfect Continuous
Used to
Would
PAST SIMPLE (regular verbs)
• Regular verbs add -ed to the base form of the verb.
– open => opened; explain => explained
• Verbs ending in -e add -d to the base form of the verb.
– arrive => arrived; phone => phoned
• In verbs ending in a consonant + -y, we change -y to -i
before adding -ed.
– try => tried; cry => cried BUT play => played; obey => obeyed
PAST SIMPLE (regular verbs)
• One-syllable verbs with a single vowel followed by a
single consonant double the final consonant.
– stop => stopped; beg => begged
• Two-syllable verbs double the final consonant when
there is a single vowel followed by a single consonant in
the last syllable and the last syllable is stressed.
– pre´fer => pre´ferred; ad´mit => ad´mitted
– !EXCEPTIONS! to the rule:
• ´label => ´labelled; ´quarrel => ´quarelled; ´signal => ´signalled;
´travel => ´travelled
PAST SIMPLE (irregular verbs)
• There are about 150 irregular verbs in English. Their
past forms must be studied and remembered .
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
put => put; cut => cut; cost => cost
ring => rang; sing => sang; sink => sank
know => knew; blow => blew; grow => grew
learn => learnt; mean => meant
write => wrote; drive => drove
buy => bought; bring => brought
go => went; be => was/were
PAST SIMPLE
• The form of the Past Simple is the same for all persons.
+
?
I/She/They remembered him very well.
You/He/We didn’t understand anything.
Did you apologize for shouting at her?
PAST SIMPLE is used:
• to talk about events, actions or situations which
happened in the PAST and are now finished. We might
use a definite time expression.
(I went to a great concert yesterday. Did you visit any foreign
countries last year?)
• to talk about habits in the past (like “used to“)
(I smoked twenty cigars a day when I was thirty.)
• in reported speech
(She said she didn’t feel like going.)
Time expressions used with the PAST
SIMPLE
yesterday
yesterday afternoon
the day before yesterday
last year
last month
last summer
four years ago
in 2007
in April
at 7.00
a long time ago
in the 20th century
then (tehdy)
when
...
PAST CONTINUOUS
Form:
Form: was/were
was/were +
+ -ing
-ing form
form of
of the
the verb
verb
+
+
I/He/She was working in New York in 2009.
You/We/They were playing polo at 7 p.m. yesterday.
-
I/He/She wasn’t having a shower when you came.
You/We/They weren’t waiting for a long time.
?
?
What was he/she doing yesterday evening?
Why were you/they sitting by the door?
PAST CONTINUOUS is used:
• to describe longer actions that were in progress at some
time in the past
(I was living in New York in 2009. They were playing curling
yesterday afternoon.
• to talk about an event that was in progress when another
event happened
(He was running down Českolipská Street when he saw a ghost. We
met each other when we were studying at university.)
PAST CONTINUOUS is used:
• to talk about two or more actions which were in progress
at the same time (parallel actions)
(I was watching Doctor Who while my husband was hovering the
carpet.)
• to talk about anticipated events that did not happen
(They were going to Paris on holiday but finally they changed their
mind and went to Rome.)
PAST CONTINUOUS is used:
• with hope, think and wonder to make polite inquiries
(I was wondering if you could lend me your mobile phone.)
• to describe repeated actions in the past that annoy us or
happen more than usual
(When we went to school, we were always getting into trouble.)
– An adverb of frequency is necessary here.
NOTE
• We often use WHEN, WHILE, AS with the Past Continuous
PAST SIMPLE and PAST
CONTINUOUS
• In narrative we use the Past Continuous to set the scene
of the story, to describe the background situation which
is not part of the main story.
• We use the Past Simple to tell the main events of the
story in chronological order.
• We often use the Past Continuous to describe an action
in progress which is interrupted by a sudden event
expressed by the Past Simple.
PAST PERFECT SIMPLE
• Form:
had
+ the
past
participle
of of
thethe
verb
Form:
had
+ the
past
participle
verb
+
?
When I arrived at the party, Jim had already gone
home.
I was really scared as I hadn’t ridden a horse before.
How long had you known each other before you got
married?
PAST PERFECT SIMPLE is used:
• to describe an event in the past that was completed
before another event in the past expressed by the Past
Simple
(By the time we got to the theatre, the play had already started.)
• as the past form of the Present Perfect Simple
COMPARE: I’m hungry, I haven’t eaten anything.
I was hungry, I hadn’t eaten anything.
• in reported speech
(She said she hadn’t told him.)
PAST PERFECT CONTINUOUS
• Form:
had had
beenbeen
+ -ing
formform
of the
Form:
+ -ing
of verb
the verb
+
-
?
They’d been studying English for a few years before
they went to London.
He hadn’t been listening to the music for a long time
when his daughter came and asked him to read
her a fairy-tale.
How long had you been waiting when she finally
turned up?
PAST PERFECT CONTINUOUS is used:
• to say how long something had been happening before
something else happened
(I had been working in a circus for twenty years before I retired.)
• as the past form of the Present Perfect Continuous
COMPARE: How long have you been waiting? (until now)
How long had you been waiting when she finally turned
up?
Past Perfect
• We don’t have to use the Past Perfect when it is clear
which event happened first.
Jane left before we got to the station. OR Jane had left before we
got to the station.
• The Past Perfect is often used after knew, thought,
realized, remembered, forgot etc.
I knew she’d been working in Buckingham Palace for a long time.
I realized I’d seen her before.
USED TO
• Form: usedForm:
to + infinitive
used to + infinitive
+
?
I used to read poetry.
She didn’t use to wear bright colours.
Did you use to obey your parents?
USED TO is used:
• to talk about a past habit that no longer happens
(I used to go jogging every morning, but I’m really lazy now. She
didn’t use to eat chocolate, but she seems to be addicted to it now.)
• to talk about a state that no longer exists
(We used to live in the country, but now we live in Prague. Did you
use to have longer hair?)
WOULD
• Form: wouldForm:
+ infinitive
would + infinitive
+
?
In summer we would get up early and go for a walk.
Whenever I was angry I wouldn’t talk to anybody for
several days.
Would you smoke a lot when you were younger?
WOULD is used:
• particularly in narrative to talk about a past habit that no
longer happens. We often use used to or the past simple
at the beginning of a story, then we continue with would
+ infinitive.
(When I was a boy we always spent/used to spend our holidays in
the country. We would get up early and we would go for a swim. ...)
NOTE:
• WOULD + infinitive is NOT used to talk about past states
I had two cats. OR I used to have two cats. NOT I would have two cats.
References
• ALEXANDER, L.G.: Longman English Grammar. New York:
Longman, 1991. ISBN 0-582-55892-1
• MURPHY, R.: English Grammar In Use. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1992. ISBN 0-521-28723-5.
• VINCE, M. and EMMERSON, P.: Intermediate Language Practice
with key. Oxford: Macmillan Publishers Limited, 2003. ISBN 1-40500768-0.
• VINCE, M. and EMMERSON, P.: First Certificate Language Practice
with key. Oxford: Macmillan Publishers Limited, 2003. ISBN 1-40500765-6.