Simple past and past progressive exercises with the time clause: While others use the time clause, so the same way as now, without time clauses.
What are your top three exercises? According to the page the correct answers have the form:
- – While-, -Forta, -Forta-.
My answers were:
- – While- -past progressive-, -simple past-.
Are my answers grammatically correct? Are they not double checked? Why both forms can be used to describe two events that occurred simultaneously.
- While the children were sleeping, their parents watched TV. Correct
is: While the children were sleeping, their parents were watching TV. While Henry
- was having a drink at the bar, his wife swam in the sea.
When Hank Henry was drinking, his wife was swimming in the sea. What happened?
- He is sleeping but his dogs eat food he doesn’t like while he is sleeping. So he decides he’ll leave the dogs at the hospital for a month.
What was different at a Starbucks when his dog ate his steaks?
How should I get back to basic training again?
What are your answers on Quora? I can’t think of any rule that mandates that the two (past) tenses have to agree, although some people might think they do need to, and enforce it that way. Who just overthought the idea by saying “no more”?
What are the two things that happen together as one happened when the other happened together? Thesis: Both are grammatically valid, at least according to
me.