Updated on November 18, 2025
Learn how to use negatives and questions in the past simple tense with clear explanations, examples, and exercises. Practice is the best way to improve your English grammar skills.
Exercises & Summary
Questions and Negatives in the Past Simple
The past simple tense is used to talk about things that happened in the past. Making positive sentences is easy, but making negative and question sentences requires a special structure.
Negatives in the Past Simple
To say something negative in the past simple, we use:
Subject + did not (didn’t) + base verb
Examples:
- I didn’t go to school yesterday.
- She didn’t eat breakfast this morning.
- They didn’t watch the movie last night.
Notes:
- Use did not (didn’t) for all verbs (regular or irregular).
- The main verb stays in the base form, even if it’s irregular.
- Correct: He didn’t see the doctor.
- Incorrect: He didn’t saw the doctor.
Questions in the Past Simple
We use the following to make a yes/no question:
Did + subject + base verb?
Examples:
- Did you visit London last summer?
- Did he buy a new car yesterday?
- Did they play football last weekend?
Short answers:
- Yes, I did. / No, I didn’t.
- Yes, she did. / No, she didn’t.
Questions that start with “wh” in the past simple
The structure is when you use question words like what, where, when, why, and how.
Question word + did + subject + base verb?
Examples:
- Where did you go yesterday?
- What did she eat for lunch?
- Why did they leave early?
Quick Tips
- Did is the helping verb for all past simple questions and negatives.
- In negative sentences and questions, the main verb never changes.
- In negative sentences, use didn’t for contractions.
- People often use words that tell time, like “yesterday,” “last week,” and “two days ago.”
Examples with Time Expressions:
- I didn’t watch TV last night.
- Did you finish your homework yesterday?