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VERB TENSES AND PATTERNS

vickyurdaneta

Created on July 10, 2020

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Transcript

PRESENT

PRESENT

PAST

PAST

VERB TENSES

SIMPLE

PERFECT

FUTURE

FUTURE

VERB PATTERNS

PRESENT

PRESENT

CONTINUOUS

PERFECT CONTINUOUS

PAST

PAST

FUTURE

FUTURE

VSA

Present

regular

Simple

Past

irregular

present simple

present continuous

Future

to be going to

will

Would / Used to

Used to talk about things in the past which no longer happen.. USED TO:"I used to live in Manchester, but I moved to London last year." "When he was at school, he used to play football every Saturday. "She used to hate her job until she got a promotion." All of these sentences describe actions or situations in the past, which are finished now; living in Manchester, playing football every Saturday, hating her job - these are all finished now. We use 'used to' to talk about actions or situations that continued for some time in the past, not for events which happened suddenly or just for a moment. So we can't say: 'I used to have a really good idea when I was brushing my teeth this morning,' because 'having a really good idea' happens suddenly - in one moment. WOULD: "When he was at university, he would sleep until noon at the weekends." "My sister lived in Australia for many years, but she would always come home for Christmas." "I would always forget my homework, until the teacher threatened to punish me." Again, these sentences are about situations in the past, which are finished. However, it's important to notice that all the sentences, here, are about actions or situations which were repeated again and again and again. Sleeping until noon at the weekends, coming home for Christmas, forgetting my homework - all these things were repeated many times, again and again and again.

Would / Used to

This is the difference between 'would' and 'used to' We only use 'would' to describe actions or situations that were repeated again and again and again... But we use 'used to' for any extended action or situation in the past. 'Would' is only good for actions or situations that were repeated many times; 'Used to' is good for any action or situation that continued for a period of time in the past. To make this clearer, let's look at the three examples of 'used to' sentences, and see if we can change them into 'would' sentences. Here's the first example again: "I used to live in Manchester, but I moved to London last year." Can we use 'would' instead of 'used to' here? No, we can't, because 'living in Manchester' wasn't repeated again and again and again. It's simply a situation in the past. Therefore, only 'used to' is good in this sentence. The second example again:" When he was at school, he used to play football every Saturday." Here, we're talking about 'playing football every Saturday'. This is an action that was repeated many times, so we can also say: "When he was at school, he would play football every Saturday". 'Used to' and 'would' are both good here, and the meaning is the same. Finally, the third example again: "She used to hate her job until she got a promotion." Did she 'hate her job' many times? No, this isn't a repeated action, so in this example 'would' isn't possible. We have to use 'used to'.

Present

Continuous

Past

Future

Present

Perfect

Past

Future

Present

Perfect Continuous

Past

Future