Past Simple

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

Use it for completed actions, past habits, finished routines, and historical facts.

The main form is: Subject + past verb (regular verbs end in -ed, while irregular verbs change form).

Common time words include yesterday, last week, an hour ago, in 2015, when I was young.

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 simple gives a sentence a specific time meaning in the past. It shows that the action started and finished before the present moment, completely cutting its tie to right now.

When learners use this tense well, their sentences become clearer because the reader knows the event is entirely over and belongs to a specific, finished time period.

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

Subject + past verb (regular verb + ed, or irregular past form)

Common Time Words

  • yesterday
  • last week
  • two days ago
  • in 2010
  • that morning
  • once
  • when I was a child

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 the past form of the verb. Regular verbs add ed or d. Irregular verbs have completely unique forms that you must memorize. The form is the same for all subjects.

  • I read a book last night.
  • Omar walked to the park yesterday.
  • The bus arrived at seven.

Negative

Use did not (or didn't) before the base verb. Notice that the main verb changes back to its base form after did not.

  • We did not watch TV last night.
  • Lina did not like the movie.
  • The app did not open quickly.

Question

Start with did, then use the subject followed by the base verb of the action.

  • Did they work here last year?
  • Did the teacher explain the rule?
  • Where did you live?

Main Uses

The past simple 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.

Completed Actions

Use the past simple for actions that happened and finished at a specific point in the past. The time can be mentioned explicitly or understood from context.

  • I drank coffee yesterday morning.
  • My parents visited us last Friday.
  • The students reviewed their notes after the test.

Past Habits and States

Use it for situations or repeated actions that were true in the past but are no longer true now. It works similarly to "used to."

  • I played tennis every week when I was young.
  • She lived in Paris for two years.
  • We loved that old restaurant before it closed.

Stories and Sequences

Use the past simple to list a sequence of events that happened one after another, like telling a story or describing a timeline.

  • The train left at six.
  • The lesson started exactly at ten.
  • The office closed early last Friday.

Examples

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

Affirmative

  • I worked yesterday morning.
  • She taught English last Monday.
  • The store opened at nine.

Negative

  • I did not work on Sunday.
  • He did not drive to school.
  • They did not eat lunch here.

Question

  • Did you study at night?
  • Did Maya speak French?
  • When did the class start?

Mini Paragraph

In real English, this tense usually appears inside a longer message. A learner might use it to explain a past event, tell part of a story, describe a completed project, or connect one finished 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 add ed or use past form after did not.

Say "He did not work", not "He did not worked".

Do not use present forms for completely finished past time.

Say "She worked yesterday", not "She work yesterday".

Do not use past continuous for simple completed historical facts.

Say "I lived in Cairo for a year" for a closed chapter, not "I was living in Cairo for a year" unless it was interrupted by another action.

Teacher tip: Ask two questions when checking your answer: Did this action finish completely in the past? Did I accidentally keep the past form of the verb after using did or didn't?

Comparison

Past simple describes completed past actions. Past continuous describes actions that were already in progress at a specific moment in the past.

She worked in a bank means she finished that period of employment. She was working late means she was in the middle of working when something else happened or at a precise time block.

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 past 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 true sentences about what you did yesterday.
  • Change three of your Present Simple routine sentences into the Past Simple.
  • Ask a partner three questions beginning with did.

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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