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Reading: Past simple, past continuous, past perfect
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B1 Grammar lessons and exercises

Past simple, past continuous, past perfect

English Test Online
Last updated: April 13, 2026 11:42 am
English Test Online

Use B1 exercises to practice the past simple, past continuous, and past perfect. Take this interactive test with answers and clear explanations to quickly improve your English grammar.

Exercises & Summary
  1. Past Simple, Past Continuous, and Past Perfect Exercises
  2. Exercise 1
  3. Exercise 2
  4. Exercise 3

Past Simple, Past Continuous, and Past Perfect Exercises

To clearly and accurately talk about things that happened in the past, you need to know the difference between past simple, past continuous, and past perfect. These three tenses help us talk about what happened, what was happening, and what had already happened before something else.

This guide will show you how these tenses are set up, what they are used for, and how they are different from each other with clear examples that B1 learners can understand.

Past Simple

What is Past Simple?

When we talk about things that happened in the past, we use the past simple. These things happened at a certain time.

You can say or figure out what time it is from the context.

Structure

Affirmative:
Subject + past verb

  • I visited my friend.
  • She watched a movie.

Negative:
Subject + did not + base verb

  • I did not visit my friend.
  • She did not watch a movie.

Question:
Did + subject + base verb?

  • Did you visit your friend?
  • Did she watch the movie?

When do we use Past Simple?

Completed actions in the past

  • I finished my homework.
  • They went to the park.

Actions in sequence

  • I woke up, had breakfast, and left the house.

Past facts

  • She lived in London for five years.

Common time expressions

  • yesterday
  • last night / last week / last year
  • ago
  • in 2020
  • then

Past Continuous

What does “past continuous” mean?

We use the past continuous to talk about things that were happening at a certain point in the past.

These things were going on, but they weren’t done yet.

Structure

Affirmative:
Subject + was/were + verb-ing

  • I was studying.
  • They were playing football.

Negative:
Subject + was not / were not + verb-ing

  • I was not studying.
  • They were not playing football.

Question:
Was/Were + subject + verb-ing?

  • Were you studying?
  • Was she working?

When do we use the past continuous?

Action happening at a certain time

  • At 8 PM, I was watching TV.

Actions that were interrupted (with past simple)

  • I was sleeping when the phone rang.

Past continuous = longer action
Past simple = shorter interrupting action

Two actions happening at the same time

  • She was cooking while I was setting the table.

Common time expressions

  • while
  • when
  • at that moment
  • at 7 PM yesterday

Past Perfect

What is the past perfect?

We use the past perfect to talk about something that happened in the past before something else.

It shows how things happened in the past.

Structure

Affirmative:
Subject + had + past participle

  • I had finished my work.
  • She had left the office.

Negative:
Subject + had not + past participle

  • I had not finished my work.
  • She had not left yet.

Question:
Had + subject + past participle?

  • Had you finished your work?
  • Had she left?

When do we use the past perfect?

An action that happened before another action in the past
  • I had eaten before I went to the meeting.

First: I ate
Second: I went to the meeting

Telling why something happened in the past
  • He was tired because he had not slept well.
With words like before, after, already, just, and by the time
  • She had already finished when I arrived.
  • By the time we got there, the train had left.

The Three Tenses: Key Differences

Simple Past vs. Past Continuous

Past simple = finished action
Past continuous = action in progress

Example:

  • I watched TV. (completed action)
  • I was watching TV. (action in progress)

Example with interruption:

  • I was watching TV when she called.

Past Simple vs Past Perfect

Past simple = action in the past
Past perfect = action before another past action

Example:

  • When I arrived, she left. (order is unclear)

Better:

  • When I arrived, she had left. (she left before I arrived)

Past Continuous vs Past Perfect

Past continuous = action in progress
Past perfect = action completed before another past action

Example:

  • I was studying when he arrived.
  • I had studied before he arrived.

Timeline Example

Let’s look at this example:

  • I had finished dinner.
  • I was watching TV.
  • My friend called me.

Correct sentence:

  • I had finished dinner, and I was watching TV when my friend called.

Order:

  1. Finished dinner (past perfect)
  2. Watching TV (past continuous)
  3. Friend called (past simple)
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