2. Use
The Past Simple tense is used in English to say that
something happened and finished in the past without any
connection with the present time. Example: I lived in New
York in 1995.
3. This means that at the present time I’m
not living in New York but perhaps
somewhere else. This is the New York
skyline at the moment. (2014)
5. Past Simple vs. Present Perfect
Compare these two sentences:
I've worked for the BMW company for
ten years. I started working for that company in
2001 and till now I’m still working for them.
However,
I worked for the BMW company for ten
years. It means that now I’m not working for
them anymore. Perhaps it was
long time ago!
6. Time expressions
PAST SIMPLE PRESENT PERFECT
• AGO it’s placed at the end of the sentence.
“ I went to London two weeks ago”.
• LAST + Tuesday, month, year, week…
“My computer crashed last week”.
• YESTERDAY.
“Her company bought new computer
desktops yesterday”.
• ALREADY
“We´ve ALREADY launched hosting services”
• EVER.
“Have you EVER increased its speed?”
• NEVER.
“She’s NEVER used an Apple Mac Laptop”.
• JUST
“They’ve JUST run the new OS”.
• YET
“I haven’t uploaded the program YET”.
• FOR
“I’ve been here FOR two years”
• SINCE
“I’ve been here SINCE half past two”.
7. Past Simple form
affirmative negative interrogative
I worked
You worked
He/she/it worked
We worked
You worked
They worked
I didn’t work
You didn’t work
He/she/it didn’t work
We didn’t work
You didn’t work
They didn’t work
Did I work?
Did you work?
Did he/she/it work?
Did we work?
Did you work?
Did they work?
8. SPELLING
Verbs ending in “y” when added “ed” change to
“ied”.
Study----------studied
Try-------------tried
Verbs ending in “y” when added “ed” do not
change their spelling
Play------------played
Double consonant for verbs of one syllable with
a short vowel sound.
ROB------ROBBED / STOP----STOPPED
9. FORM
This tense is made up HAS / HAVE + Past participle.
Regular verbs ta “–ED” ending and irregular verbs form the Present
Perfect with the Past Participle of the irregular verb.
AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE INTERROGATIVE
I have seen / worked
You have seen / worked
He / she / it has seen/
worked
We have seen/ worked
You have seen/ worked
They have seen/ worked
I haven’t seen/ worked
You haven’t seen/ worked
He /she / it hasn’t seen/
worked
We haven’t seen/ worked
You haven’t seen/ worked
They haven’t seen/ worked
Have I seen / worked?
Have you seen/ worked?
Has he /she / it seen/
worked?
Have we seen/ worked?
Have you seen/ worked?
Have they seen/ worked?
10. IRREGULAR VERBS
These verbs do not follow the same rules.
Can we classify irregular verbs? YES, WE
CAN!
TYPE 1: 3 FORMS =
INFINITIVE PAST PARTICIPLE
RUN
LET
RUN
LET
RUN
LET
11. TYPE 2: past and participle ending in
–OUGHT/ AUGHT
INFINITIVE PAST PARTICIPLE MEANING
TEACH
BUY
TAUGHT
BOUGHT
TAUGHT
BOUGHT
ENSEÑAR
COMPRAR
12. Now it is your turn to classify them!
Type 3:…….