Derek: “I went
to the cinema last week.”
Clive: “I didn’t
know people still went to the cinema.”
Statement of Form
Sbj + past tense
verb (for regular verbs, add –ed, -d or –ied, depending on the spelling of the
base form; for irregular verbs students must memorize the form)
Negatives and
questions formed with the auxiliary verb, ‘did’.
Where the main verb
is ‘be’, use ‘was’ or ‘were’.
Students need to know
The Past Simple is
used to describe a range of situations in the past, from the single
event (going to the cinema) above, to states that pertained for a long time…
Bill: “I worked
as a lift attendant until I was 30.”
Ben: “How was that?
Bill: “It was a bit
up and down, to be honest.”
… via repeated
actions…
Ant: “Those were
the days: we always went to Norfolk for our holidays, do you remember?”
Dec: “Sadly, yes.”
… including things
that are still true (or, at least the speaker thinks so)
Simon: “We really
must go to Brighton again next Bank holiday; it was so peaceful and that
lovely sandy beach was a delight.”
Garfunkel: “?”
... and a series of
sequential actions:
Gary: “I met
her in the pub, got chatting, we finished our drinks, went
back to her place, listened to some Bowie to get us in the mood, then,
you know, made out. How cool is that?”
Paul: “Who’s Bowie?”
We also often use
the Past simple to convey the idea of ‘distance from reality’. This use
of the Past Simple to separate the speaker from reality pops up all over the
place. In conditionals…
“If I had a
million pounds [he hasn’t], I’d buy a mansion.”
… in reported
speech…
Angie: “What the
hell is this!?”
Dennis: “Well, you
told me you wanted a mobile home for Christmas.
Angie: “No, I said,
‘I want a mobile PHONE’.”
…in indirect
speech…
“He wanted to know
what the capital of Swaziland was.”
“Funny question.”
… to be extra
polite or show respect
Waiter: “Were
you ready to order, Sir?”
Customer: “Yes. I’ll
have the nut roast.”
… and notice how it
indicates our speech is indirect:
“I didn’t know
people still went to the cinema.” (=People still go to the cinema?)
- he’s using the
past simple, but talking about the present.
Students struggle with
The uses above that
refer directly to the past do not pose a huge problem conceptually for most
students. As a rule of thumb, it can be seen as the “default” way of referring
to the past. However, many (even very advanced learners) continue to confuse
past simple with present perfect, so subtle can be the difference. (see
unit on Present Perfect for more on this).
Uses where the past
form refers to a time other than the past, needless to say, cause students
immense problems.
Form is a major
headache. ‘Regular’ verbs may have irregular spellings (‘cried’, ‘stopped’,
‘loved’) and tricky pronunciation rules:
is that “–ed” /Id/ or just /t/?; many of the most common verbs are
irregular: students have no choice but to memorize the past tense form. Add to
this the fact that the verb ‘be’ is handled totally differently to other verbs,
and that negatives and questions involve the non-intuitive introduction of
auxiliary verb ‘did’ as well as changes in word order and, well, you’ve got
your work cut out.
Generative situations
My secret past
Realia from your
past would be useful: a school photo, school and degree certificates, your
first job offer letter, a love letter (!?)
Students will find it all fascinating, and it will enable you to elicit
sentences like, “I started school in 1984.” “I played for the school football
team.” “I loved Judith Davis but she didn’t love me.” Etc.
Fun practice
Great weekend / Awful weekend
(note: Works best
on a Monday!) Start by establishing that we often ask “How was your weekend?”
on a Monday morning. The usual response is “Fine, and yours?” and that’s the
end of the conversation. This activity aims to take it a bit further. Get
students to list things that might have happened in a great weekend, and a
separate list of things that would make a horrendous weekend (staying clear of
obviously awful things like death of a relative, war etc.) Make sure the lists
are written in note form: “win lottery”, “have sex” “lose wallet” “cat die”
“meet Brad Pitt” “see bad movie”. They then ask and answer questions about
their weekend:
“How
was your weekend?”
“It
was great! I won the lottery!”
“Wow!”
“How
was your weekend?”
“It
was awful. My cat died.”
“Oh,
I am sorry.” And so on…
Note
that, in addition to practising past simple, this activity encourages natural reactions.
This is really great. Thanks a lot.
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