Kategorien: Alle - negative - past - questions - verb

von Jair Lechuga Vor 6 Jahren

152

To be past

The text focuses on the usage of the verb "to be" in its past forms, "was" and "were". It presents different structures for forming questions, affirmative statements, and negative sentences.

To be past

Structures

Question

You, we, they?

1. Were you with a lot of people? 2. Were they interesting? 3. Were we at the cinema last week? 4. Was John at the concert? 5. Were you happy? 6. Was the museum interesting? 7. Were we at the sports centre ? 8. Was the party fun ? 9. Were they at home all day ? 10. Was the weather good ?

I, he, she it?

Negative

Were not/Weren't.
Was not/ Wasn't

1. I wasn’t with you yesterday. 2. He wasn’t in London on Friday. 3. They weren’t at the concert. 4. You weren’t in class yesterday. 5. We weren’t at the art gallery. 6. She wasn’t there on Saturday. 7. We weren't at the sports centre 8. The party wasn't fun 9. They weren't at home all day 10. The weather wasn't good

Affirmative

You, we, they
Were
I, he, she, it
Was

1. I was in London in 1999. 2. Pam was in London in 1999, too. 3. We were together. 4. She was my girlfriend. 5. Helen was absent from class yesterday 6. We were at the movies last night 7. Jhon and Mary were in Quito the last week 8. I was too busy yesterday 9. I was tired this morning. 10. You were funny today

Was /Were (Verb To be in past)

Used principally to describe events in the past.

Was/Were
The form of the verb to be is am (contracted to 'm), is ('s) and are ('re) in the present tense and was/were in the past.