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Past Continuous

 

This lesson explains the past continuous in clear, practical English.

Use it for actions in progress at a past time, background actions, and interrupted past actions.

The main form is: Subject + was or were + verb-ing.

Common time words include at 7 p.m. yesterday, when I called, while, during the meeting, all morning, at that moment.

You will study affirmative sentences, negative sentences, questions, common mistakes, and useful examples.

By the end, you should be able to recognize the tense and use it in real sentences.

Overview

The past continuous gives a sentence a specific time meaning. It is not only about the verb form; it also tells the listener how the action connects to time, routine, progress, completion, or duration.

When learners use this tense well, their sentences become clearer because the reader knows whether the action is normal, finished, happening now, completed before another time, or continuing for a period.

Start by learning the pattern, then connect the pattern to real situations. Grammar becomes easier when each form has a clear reason.

Subject + was or were + verb-ing

Common Time Words

  • at 7 p.m. yesterday
  • when I called
  • while
  • during the meeting
  • all morning
  • at that moment

Forms

The form of a tense is the grammar structure you use to build sentences. Study affirmative, negative, and question forms together so you can change a sentence quickly.

Affirmative

Use was with I, he, she, it, and singular nouns. Use were with you, we, they, and plural nouns.

  • I was reading.
  • The teacher was explaining the rule.
  • The children were playing outside.

Negative

Place not after was or were.

  • I was not reading.
  • The teacher was not explaining the rule.
  • The children were not playing outside.

Question

Move was or were before the subject.

  • Were you reading?
  • Was the teacher explaining the rule?
  • Where were the children playing?

Main Uses

The past continuous appears in many real conversations, lessons, stories, emails, and tests. The key is to choose it because the meaning needs this tense, not only because a time word appears.

Action In Progress In The Past

Use the past continuous for an action that was already happening at a specific past time.

  • At eight, I was studying.
  • At midnight, they were driving home.
  • During lunch, she was checking her email.

Interrupted Action

Use past continuous for the longer action and past simple for the interruption.

  • I was cooking when the phone rang.
  • They were watching TV when the lights went out.
  • She was walking home when it started to rain.

Background In A Story

Use it to set the scene before the main events.

  • The wind was blowing, and people were running to their cars.
  • Everyone was talking when the manager entered.

Examples

Read these examples aloud. Notice how the helping verbs and main verbs change in each sentence type.

Affirmative

  • I was studying at seven.
  • She was writing when I called.
  • They were waiting outside.

Negative

  • I was not sleeping.
  • He was not driving fast.
  • They were not listening.

Question

  • Were you studying?
  • What was Maya doing?
  • Were the students waiting outside?

Mini Paragraph

In real English, this tense usually appears inside a longer message. A learner might use it to explain a routine, tell part of a story, describe a plan, or connect one action to another time. The goal is not to memorize one sentence, but to understand why the tense fits the meaning.

Common Mistakes

Most tense mistakes happen because learners mix the auxiliary verb, the main verb form, or the time meaning. Slow down and check each part of the sentence.

Do not use was with plural subjects.

Say "They were working", not "They was working".

Do not forget the ing form.

Say "I was studying", not "I was study".

Use past simple for completed main actions.

Say "I opened the door" if the action is complete.

Teacher tip: Ask two questions when checking your answer: What time does the action belong to? What form does this tense need?

Comparison

Past continuous shows an action in progress. Past simple shows a completed action.

I was reading when he arrived means reading was in progress. I read the chapter means the action is complete.

How To Decide

  • Look for the time meaning first.
  • Choose the tense that matches that meaning.
  • Build the sentence with the correct auxiliary verb and main verb form.
  • Check if the sentence needs a time word or if the context is already clear.

Practice

Use these tasks after reading the lesson. They help move the grammar from recognition to real use.

  • Write five sentences with when.
  • Describe what you were doing at three different times yesterday.
  • Write a short scene using was, were, and past simple interruptions.

Self Check

After you answer, underline the verb phrase in each sentence. Then name the tense and explain why that tense is correct.

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