A2 verb_tenses 6分で読める

Past Continuous: Formation

The Past Continuous acts like a video camera, capturing actions that were in progress during a specific past moment.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use `was` or `were` plus the `verb + -ing` to form it.
  • It describes actions that were in progress at a specific past time.
  • Use it for background scenes in stories or interrupted actions.
  • Avoid using it with 'stative verbs' like `know`, `love`, or `understand`.

Quick Reference

Subject Helper (Be) Main Verb (+ing) Example
I, He, She, It was working I was working late.
You, We, They were working They were working hard.
Negative (All) wasn't / weren't sleeping She wasn't sleeping.
Question (I/He/She/It) Was [subject]...? eating Was he eating lunch?
Question (You/We/They) Were [subject]...? listening Were they listening?
Spelling: -e was / were making (make - e) We were making cake.
Spelling: Double was / were sitting (sit + t) He was sitting alone.

主な例文

3 / 9
1

I was reading a book when the lights went out.

Estaba leyendo un libro cuando se fue la luz.

2

They were playing football at 5 PM yesterday.

Ellos estaban jugando fútbol a las 5 PM ayer.

3

He was running to catch the bus.

Él estaba corriendo para alcanzar el autobús.

💡

The 'Video' Trick

If you can imagine a video of the action happening, you can probably use the Past Continuous. If it feels more like a single photo, use the Past Simple.

⚠️

The Stative Trap

Be careful with verbs like `believe` or `know`. Even if you were 'believing' something for a long time, English speakers only use the Past Simple for these. It's just a quirk of the language!

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use `was` or `were` plus the `verb + -ing` to form it.
  • It describes actions that were in progress at a specific past time.
  • Use it for background scenes in stories or interrupted actions.
  • Avoid using it with 'stative verbs' like `know`, `love`, or `understand`.

Overview

Imagine you are watching a movie of your life. You press the pause button right in the middle of a scene. What were you doing at that exact moment? You weren't just 'doing' it; you were in the middle of it. That is what the Past Continuous is for. It is the 'video' mode of the past. It describes actions that were already happening at a specific point in time. It is not about a finished event. It is about the atmosphere and the background. Think of it like a grammar spotlight. It shines a light on a moment that was stretching out before something else happened. It is friendly, it is descriptive, and it is essential for telling great stories. Without it, your English would feel a bit like a series of static photos. With it, your English becomes a movie.

How This Grammar Works

This tense is all about duration and progress. It focuses on the 'middle' of an action. When you use the Past Simple, you say I ate dinner. That sounds like a single, completed fact. It's done. Box checked. But when you use the Past Continuous, you say I was eating dinner. Now, we can see the steam from the food. We can hear the fork hitting the plate. You are inviting the listener into that moment. It works by combining two parts: a helper and a main action. The helper tells us 'when' (the past) and 'who' (the subject). The main action tells us 'what' (the activity). Together, they create a bridge through time. It is like a grammar bridge that connects the start of an action to the end, but we are standing right in the middle of it.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Building this tense is like following a simple recipe. You only need three ingredients.
  2. 2Start with your Subject. This is the 'who' of your sentence.
  3. 3Add the correct form of be in the past. This is your auxiliary verb. If the subject is I, he, she, or it, use was. If the subject is you, we, or they, use were.
  4. 4Add your main verb with an -ing ending. This is the 'present participle'.
  5. 5For example, if you want to talk about your friend Sarah: Sarah (Subject) + was (Helper) + studying (Main verb + -ing).
  6. 6To make it negative, just add not after the helper: I was not (wasn't) sleeping.
  7. 7To ask a question, swap the subject and the helper: Were you listening?
  8. 8It is as easy as that. Just remember that was and were are like the glue that holds the whole thing together. Without them, the sentence falls apart. Yes, even native speakers forget the glue sometimes, but you won't!

When To Use It

You will find yourself using this tense constantly in real life. Here are the most common scenarios.

  • Background Scenes: When you start a story, you set the stage. The sun was shining and the birds were singing. It creates the mood before the main action starts.
  • Interrupted Actions: This is the most famous use. You were in the middle of something when something else happened. I was taking a shower when the phone rang. The shower was the long action; the phone was the short interruption.
  • Specific Moments: If someone asks, 'What were you doing at 8 PM last night?', you use this tense. I was watching a movie.
  • Parallel Actions: When two things were happening at the same time. I was cooking while my brother was playing games.
  • Temporary Habits: To complain about something that happened a lot. He was always losing his keys! It adds a bit of emotion to the sentence.

When Not To Use It

There is a special group of verbs that do not like the Past Continuous. We call these 'stative verbs'. These are verbs about feelings, thoughts, and senses. Think of them like snapshots, not videos. You either have them or you don't.

  • Verbs of thinking: know, believe, understand, remember. You wouldn't say I was knowing the answer. That sounds a bit like a grammar headache. Just say I knew the answer.
  • Verbs of feeling: love, hate, want, need. You don't say I was wanting a coffee. You say I wanted a coffee.
  • Verbs of possession: have (meaning own), belong, own.

Think of it like a grammar traffic light. For action verbs like run, eat, and work, the light is green. For stative verbs, the light is red. Stop and use the Past Simple instead!

Common Mistakes

Don't worry, everyone makes mistakes when they start. It's part of the process! Here are the ones to watch out for.

  • The Missing Helper: This is the big one. Saying I working instead of I was working. It makes you sound a bit like a caveman. Me work. Me hungry. Always remember your was or were.
  • Using the Wrong Helper: Saying You was instead of You were. Even though you can be one person, it always takes the plural form were. Think of you as a very important person who needs a bigger verb.
  • Spelling Mistakes: Sometimes we forget how to add -ing. For short verbs like run, you need to double the last letter: running. For verbs ending in e like dance, you drop the e: dancing.
  • Using Stative Verbs: As we mentioned before, trying to make know or believe continuous. It just doesn't feel right to an English ear.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

The biggest struggle for most people is choosing between Past Simple and Past Continuous. Think of it like this:

  • Past Simple = The finished event. The 'What happened?'
  • Past Continuous = The background. The 'What was going on?'

If you are in a job interview and they ask about your last project, you might say: I managed a team of five. (Past Simple - a finished fact). But if you are describing a specific challenge, you might say: While we were developing the app, we discovered a major bug. (Past Continuous - the background situation).

The Past Simple is the 'snap' of a camera. The Past Continuous is the 'flow' of a river. They work together to make your English sound natural and fluid. Use them both to give your stories depth.

Quick FAQ

Q. Can I use was with they?

A. No, they always needs were. Think of it as they were being a team.

Q. What is the difference between while and when?

A. Usually, we use while with the Past Continuous (while I was sleeping) and when with the Past Simple (when the bell rang).

Q. Is it okay to say I was being good?

A. Yes! Be can sometimes be used in the continuous form when we talk about behavior. It's a bit of an advanced trick.

Q. Why do we use this for complaining?

A. When you say He was always complaining, the continuous form makes it feel like the action never stopped. It sounds much more annoying!

Reference Table

Subject Helper (Be) Main Verb (+ing) Example
I, He, She, It was working I was working late.
You, We, They were working They were working hard.
Negative (All) wasn't / weren't sleeping She wasn't sleeping.
Question (I/He/She/It) Was [subject]...? eating Was he eating lunch?
Question (You/We/They) Were [subject]...? listening Were they listening?
Spelling: -e was / were making (make - e) We were making cake.
Spelling: Double was / were sitting (sit + t) He was sitting alone.
💡

The 'Video' Trick

If you can imagine a video of the action happening, you can probably use the Past Continuous. If it feels more like a single photo, use the Past Simple.

⚠️

The Stative Trap

Be careful with verbs like `believe` or `know`. Even if you were 'believing' something for a long time, English speakers only use the Past Simple for these. It's just a quirk of the language!

🎯

Polite Requests

Use `I was wondering...` or `I was hoping...` to sound more polite when asking for something. It sounds less direct and more soft than `I wonder` or `I hope`.

💬

The Drama Tense

English speakers use this tense to sound more dramatic. `He was shouting at me!` sounds much more intense than `He shouted at me`. It emphasizes the feeling of the moment.

例文

9
#1 I was reading a book when the lights went out.

I was reading a book when the lights went out.

Focus: was reading

Estaba leyendo un libro cuando se fue la luz.

A classic interrupted action.

#2 They were playing football at 5 PM yesterday.

They were playing football at 5 PM yesterday.

Focus: were playing

Ellos estaban jugando fútbol a las 5 PM ayer.

Focus on a specific point in time.

#3 He was running to catch the bus.

He was running to catch the bus.

Focus: running

Él estaba corriendo para alcanzar el autobús.

Note the double 'n' in running.

#4 She was writing an email when her computer crashed.

She was writing an email when her computer crashed.

Focus: writing

Ella estaba escribiendo un correo cuando su computadora falló.

Drop the 'e' from write.

#5 I was wondering if you could help me with this.

I was wondering if you could help me with this.

Focus: was wondering

Me preguntaba si podrías ayudarme con esto.

A polite, slightly formal way to ask for a favor.

#6 ✗ I reading yesterday. → ✓ I was reading yesterday.

I was reading yesterday.

Focus: was reading

Ayer estaba leyendo.

Never forget the 'was' or 'were'!

#7 ✗ You was eating. → ✓ You were eating.

You were eating.

Focus: were eating

Tú estabas comiendo.

'You' always takes 'were'.

#8 My neighbors were constantly making noise last night.

My neighbors were constantly making noise last night.

Focus: were constantly making

Mis vecinos estuvieron haciendo ruido constantemente anoche.

Used with 'constantly' to show annoyance.

#9 While I was studying, my cat was sleeping on my desk.

While I was studying, my cat was sleeping on my desk.

Focus: was studying

Mientras yo estudiaba, mi gato dormía en mi escritorio.

Two actions happening at the same time.

自分をテスト

Complete the sentence with the correct Past Continuous form.

At noon yesterday, we ___ (have) lunch at that new Italian place.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: were having

Because the subject is 'we', we use 'were'. We drop the 'e' in 'have' before adding 'ing'.

Choose the correct interruption.

I was watching TV when someone ___ (knock) on the door.

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: knocked

The Past Continuous (was watching) is for the long background action. The Past Simple (knocked) is for the short interruption.

Identify the stative verb error.

Which sentence is incorrect?

✓ 正解! ✗ おしい! 正解: I was knowing the answer.

'Know' is a stative verb. It doesn't usually take the continuous form. You should say 'I knew the answer'.

🎉 スコア: /3

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Past Simple vs. Past Continuous

Past Simple (The Snap)
Finished I finished my work.
Short Action The phone rang.
Past Continuous (The Flow)
In Progress I was working.
Long Action I was talking to a friend.

Can I use -ING?

1

Is it a stative verb (know, love, want)?

YES ↓
NO
Use Past Simple (I knew).
2

Was the action in progress at a specific time?

YES ↓
NO
Use Past Simple (I went).
3

Choose your helper: Was or Were?

YES ↓
NO
I/He/She/It = Was | You/We/They = Were
4

Add Verb + ING!

YES ↓
NO
I was running!

Spelling Rules for -ING

📝

Standard

  • read -> reading
  • play -> playing
✂️

Drop the 'e'

  • dance -> dancing
  • write -> writing
👥

Double Consonant

  • run -> running
  • swim -> swimming
🔄

IE to Y

  • lie -> lying
  • die -> dying

よくある質問

22 問

It is a verb tense used to describe actions that were in the middle of happening at a specific point in the past. You form it using was or were plus the verb-ing.

Use was for singular subjects like I, he, she, and it. Use were for plural subjects like we, they, and also for you (even if it is just one person).

In the Past Continuous, it is always I was. You might hear If I were in other types of grammar (like conditionals), but for this tense, stick to was.

No, if the action is finished and the time is over, use the Past Simple. The Past Continuous is for actions that were 'ongoing' or 'incomplete' at that moment.

Stative verbs are words for feelings, thoughts, and senses like know, want, and see. These usually do not use the -ing form in English.

Just put not between the helper and the main verb. For example, I was not working or the contraction I wasn't working.

Move the was or were to the front of the sentence. Instead of You were sleeping, say Were you sleeping?.

When a short verb ends in a consonant-vowel-consonant pattern (like r-u-n), we double the last letter to keep the vowel sound short. Otherwise, it would sound different!

You usually drop the e before adding -ing. So make becomes making and ride becomes riding. Easy!

We often use while with the continuous action (while I was cooking) and when for the shorter interruption (when you called). It helps the listener understand the timing.

Yes! This is called parallel actions. I was studying while my sister was watching TV means both were happening at the same time.

When you use always or constantly with this tense, it usually means you are complaining. He was always leaving the door open! expresses frustration.

Not necessarily. It just focuses on different things. I worked is a fact; I was working is a description of your time.

You can use it to emphasize that something took a lot of time. I was living in London all last year sounds more temporary than I lived in London.

In standard English, no. It should always be were you. Some local dialects might use was you, but in your exams and professional life, use were!

Authors use it to set the scene. They describe what people were doing and what the weather was like before the main plot starts.

Absolutely. It was raining or The wind was blowing are perfect ways to describe the atmosphere of a past day.

Yes! While be is usually stative, we use it in the continuous to describe someone's behavior at a specific moment.

You can say Yes, I was or No, they weren't. You don't need to repeat the whole verb phrase.

Only if the habit was temporary or if you are complaining about it. Otherwise, use used to or the Past Simple.

In grammar, you is treated as plural even when talking to one person. So always use were with you.

Not at all! Once you remember the was/were helper, the rest is just adding -ing. You'll be a pro in no time!

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