Μάθημα : ΑΓΓΛΙΚΑ Α' ΓΥΜΝΑΣΙΟΥ
Κωδικός : 0501447124
Unit 7 In our mind's eye!
Was/were
We use was/were as the past simple forms of be. We use was for I/he/she/it and were for you/we/they.
- I was at home yesterday.
- You were late at the meeting.
- She was excited about the party.
- We were tired after the excursion.
- Were they at the conference?
No positive short forms
The negative short forms of was not and were not are wasn’t and weren’t, but there are no short forms of was and were in affirmative sentences.
- Tom was tired, but Susan wasn’t very tired.
- Paul and Tom were happy, but we weren’t happy.
Was/were: Use
Was/were are the past forms of am/is/are. Present: am/is = past: was. Present: are = past: were.
- I‘m happy. ⇒ I was happy. (am ⇒ was)
- She is at her office. ⇒ She was at her office. (is ⇒ was)
- You are late. ⇒ You were late. (are ⇒ were)
We use was/were to talk about the past. We often use past expressions of time: yesterday, last night, last week, two months ago, etc.
- She was in Stuttgart last summer.
- We were late to the party last night.
We use was/were in the expression was/were born. The expression be born is always past (NOT present): was/were born.
- ‘Where were you born?’ ‘I was born in Sweden.’

- ‘Where are you born?’ ‘I am born in Sweden.’

- Mozart was born in 1756.
Past simple: Use
Past finished actions or states
We can use the past simple to talk about past finished actions or states. We know and we often mention when these actions happened with a past time expression: yesterday, yesterday morning, last night, last week, two days ago, five years ago, etc.
- Jessica called me last night.
- Rachel was a very good writer.
Past repeated actions
We can use the past simple to talk about habits or repeated actions that happened in the past but don’t happen in the present. We often use adverbs or expressions of frequency (often, always, every day, etc.).
- When I was a child, I ate sweets every day.
- In school, I always played football during break time.