part 2

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·         She said she had been trying to call me all day.

Past tense review 2

We can use the past simple to talk about actions and states which we see as completed in the past.

·         I left school when I was sixteen.

·         I was very happy then.

·         He told me all about his childhood.

We can use the past continuous to talk about past events which went on for a period of time.

·         While I was driving home, Peter was trying desperately to contact me.

·         I was thinking about him last night.

·         I was walking in the street when I suddenly fell over.

We can use the present perfect when we want to look back from the present to the past.

·         I've broken my watch so I don't know what time it is.

·         She hasn't arrived yet.

·         We've been to Singapore a lot over the last few years.

·         Have you ever been to Argentina?

The Present Perfect Continuous can be used to talk about an action or actions that started in the past and continued until recently or that continue into the future.

·         You look tired. Have you been sleeping properly?

·         I've been waiting for him for 30 minutes and he still hasn't arrived.

·         He's been phoning me all week for an answer.

We can use the past perfect simple to talk about what happened before a point in the past. It looks back from a point in the past to further in the past.

·         I hadn't known the bad news when I spoke to him.

·         I thought we had already decided on a name for this product.

We can use the past perfect continuous to look back at a situation in progress.

·         We had been thinking about buying a new house but then we decided to stay here.

·         It had been snowing for a while before we left.

·         She said she had been trying to call me all day.

Going to

There is no one 'future tense' in English. There are 4 future forms. The one which is used most often in spoken English is 'going to', not 'will'.

We use 'going to' when we want to talk about a plan for the future.

·         I'm going to see him later today.

·         They're going to launch it next month.

·         We're going to have lunch first.

·         She's going to see what she can do.

·         I'm not going to talk for very long.

Notice that this plan does not have to be for the near future.

·         When I retire I'm going to go back to Barbados to live.

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