Susan
I was playing the piano. I used to play the piano. I had played the piano. I had been playing the piano. They all in the past.but I need someone explain these sentences đŸ™đŸ»
2021ćčŽ7月10æ—„ 10:04
曞答 · 9
2
I was playing the piano yesterday . I used to play the piano ( I don't play the piano anymore. I stopped playing the piano last year) I had been playing the piano since I was 5 years old ( Still performing the piano)
2021ćčŽ7月10æ—„
2
They are different pasts. "I was playing the piano" is a past continuous. Is used when the action you are talking about was not finished yet when, for example, something happened: I was playing the piano when the bell rang. "I used to play the piano" is something you used to do in the past, but you don't do it anymore. Ex. I used to play the piano when I was a kid. Also, this usually refers to a habit, like playing a sport, playing an instrument, or going in a certain place (ex. I used to go to school by bus every morning) "I had played the piano" is a past perfect. It means that you did it before something else (ex. I knew her because I had played with her years before). "I had been playing the piano" is a past perfect progressive. It is something that happened in the past and ended in the past. (Ex. The boys came home very tired because they had been playing football)
2021ćčŽ7月10æ—„
1
Yes, they are different forms of the past tense. I was playing the piano. - at a time before now, perhaps yesterday, last week and so on. I used to play the piano. - I've stopped playing the piano but in the past, I played the piano. I have played the piano. - It's an activity that I completed. I have had breakfast. I have played the piano. I had been playing the piano since (a time, e.g.) I was a child./I was ten years old./five years ago. Hope that helps! :)
2021ćčŽ7月11æ—„
1
I was playing the piano. This means the action of playing the piano was going on in the past implying that it was a continuous activity in the past and had not been completed at the time being referred to. I used to play the piano. This means that it was a routine or rather a habit you had; implying that you regularly used to play the piano but not anymore. I had played the piano. This means that you had completed the act in the past implying that the action was complete in the past being referred to. I had been playing the piano. This means that the action of playing the piano was going in the past implying that the action being referred to was a continuous one. Kindly refer to the grammar topics; tense and aspect.
2021ćčŽ7月10æ—„
1
Hi all! I am new to Italki and want to improve my English since I use it a lot at work. I can give some introduction in Spanish and Swedish. I am a social person who likes to talk to new people. BR Daniel Herrera
2021ćčŽ7月10æ—„
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