Regular Verbs: Simple Past Tense: Lesson #10
Regular Verbs: Simple Past Tense: Lesson #10
Regular Verbs: Simple Past Tense: Lesson #10
Lesson #10
Regular verbs:
Simple past tense
Lesson Plan by Catherine Schell & Dr. Grard Beck
Lesson Plans for English as a Foreign Language (EFL) Teachers Guide
The goals of this weeks Classroom lesson (#10) are to learn more about the simple past tense of regular verbs. In this les-
son, you will learn how to recognize and use the simple past tense of regular verbs in order to further extend your knowl-
edge of verb conjugation in English. You will be able to master this skill through the following text, grammatical explana-
tions, and exercises within VOAs The Classroom.
WARM-UP:
PAST PRESENT FUTURE
Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forward. ~ Soren Kierkegaard
Below is an edited version of a VOA News article. Read it and underline all the regular simple past tenses you
can find.
Americans experimented with many new customs and social traditions during the 1920s. There were new danc-
es, new kinds of clothes and some of the most imaginative art and writing ever produced in the United States.
Many people labeled the period The Roaring Twenties, to show the exuberance and vitality of the artistic and
social scenes.
But in most ways, the 1920s were a conservative time in American life. Voters elected three conservative
Republican presidents: Warren Harding, Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover. And they supported many con-
servative social and political policies.
KAY GALLANT: The nineteen twenties brought a feeling of freedom and independence to millions of Ameri-
cans, especially young Americans. Young soldiers returned from the world war with new ideas. They had seen a
different world in Europe. They had faced death and learned to enjoy the pleasures that each day offered.
Many of these young soldiers were not willing to quietly accept the old traditions of their families and villages
when they returned home. Instead, they wanted to try new ways of living.
HARRY MONROE: Many young Americans, both men and women, began to challenge some of the traditions
of their parents and grandparents. For example, some young women began to experiment with new kinds of
clothes. They no longer wore dresses that hid the shape of their bodies. Instead, they wore thinner dresses that
uncovered part of their legs.
Many young women began to smoke cigarettes, too. Cigarette production in the United States more than dou-
bled in the ten years between nineteen eighteen and nineteen twenty-eight.
Many women also began to drink alcohol with men in public for the first time. And they listened together to a
popular new kind of music: jazz.
Young people danced the Fox Trot, the Charleston, and other new dances. They held one another tightly on the
dance floor, instead of dancing far apart.
(MUSIC)
KAY GALLANT: It was a revolution in social values, at least among some Americans. People openly discussed
subjects that their parents and grandparents had kept private.
There were popular books and shows about unmarried mothers and about homosexuality. The growing film
industry made films about all-night parties between unmarried men and women. And people discussed the new
ideas about sex formed by Sigmund Freud and other new thinkers.
An important force behind these changes was the growing independence of American women. In nineteen
twenty, the nation passed the Nineteenth Amendment to the constitution, which gave women the right to vote.
Of equal importance, many women took jobs during the war and continued working after the troops returned
home. Also, new machines freed many of them from spending long hours of work in the home washing clothes,
preparing food, and doing other jobs.
HARRY MONROE: Education was another important force behind the social changes of the nineteen-twen-
ties. More and more Americans were getting a good education. The number of students attending high school
doubled between nineteen twenty and nineteen thirty. Many of the schools now offered new kinds of classes to
prepare students for useful jobs.
Attendance at colleges and universities also increased greatly. And colleges offered more classes in such useful
subjects as teacher training, engineering, and business administration.
Two inventions also helped cause the social changes. They were the automobile and the radio. The automobile
gave millions of Americans the freedom to travel easily to new places. And the radio brought new ideas and
experiences into their own homes.
Probably the most important force behind social change was the continuing economic growth of the nineteen
twenties. Many people had extra money to spend on things other than food, housing, and other basic needs.
They could experiment with new products and different ways of living.
(MUSIC)
KAY GALLANT: Of course, not all Americans were wearing strange new flapper clothes or dancing until
early in the morning. Millions of Americans in small towns or rural areas continued to live simple, quiet lives.
Life was still hard for many people including blacks, foreigners, and other minority groups.
The many newspaper stories about independent women reporters and doctors also did not represent the real life
of the average American woman. Women could vote. But three of every four women still worked at home. Most
of the women working outside their homes were from minority groups or foreign countries.
The films and radio stories about exciting parties and social events were just a dream for millions of Americans.
But the dreams were strong. And many Americans -- rich and poor -- followed with great interest each new
game, dance, and custom.
HARRY MONROE: The wide interest in this kind of popular culture was unusually strong during the nineteen
twenties. People became extremely interested in exciting court trials, disasters, film actors, and other subjects.
For example, millions of Americans followed the sad story of Floyd Collins, a young man who became trapped
while exploring underground. Newsmen reported to the nation as rescue teams searched to find him. Even the
New York Times newspaper printed a large story on its front page when rescuers finally discovered the mans
dead body.
Another event that caught public attention was a murder trial in the eastern state of New Jersey in nineteen
twenty-six.
Newsmen wrote five million words about this case of a minister found dead with a woman member of his
church. Again, the case itself was of little importance from a world news point of view. But it was exciting. And
Americans were tired of reading about serious political issues after the bloody world war.
LESSON
When the verb ends with two different consonants or with two similar consonants, add ed to the verb. If it ends
in consonant + y, replace the y by i and add ed:
LESSON (cont.)
* In the US, all other verbs ending in a single consonant do not double the
consonant. In British English, they do. Both are correct however.
The text focuses on war / the text focused on war. (US English)
The text focusses on war / the text focussed on war.
(British English)
LESSON (cont.)
The auxiliary verb do in its past form (did) is essential to phrasing questions in the simple
past tense:
Exercises
1. Circle the correct simple past tense conjugation of the verb:
a) He seemed anxious.
b) We agreed on the deadline for submission.
c) They patted him on the shoulder.
d) The Romans conquered most of the Mediterranean basin.
e) She listened to the weather forecast.
2. Fill in the blanks and conjugate the verbs in the simple past tense:
Last night, my friends and I ___________________ (decide) to go out. It was nice out, so we
___________________ (walk) downtown and ___________________ (look) for a nice place to have drinks.
We all ___________________ (settle) on a warm-looking and cozy pub, which ___________________ (ad-
vertize) a funk band playing that night. We ___________________ (enter) and as we ___________________
(glance) around, it ___________________ (appear) that it was not too crowded. We ___________________
(stay) anyway, and the concert was fantastic! We ___________________ (dance) for hours and had a lot of fun!
4. Recount a memory using regular verbs in the simple past tense as much as possible.
Example:
In 2000, I remember I traveled to the USA for the first time. I decided to stay on the West coast, and I loved it!
People were very friendly and welcomed me with open arms []
Wind-down
Below is a link from VOA Special English about the history of OK. The original text is called
Seriously: OK Began as a Joke in a Newspaper in Boston in 1839.
http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/usa/Seriously-OK-Began-as-a-Joke-in-a-Newspaper-in--
111558639.html
Can you find examples of regular verbs that are conjugated in the simple past tense?
What are the infinitives of these verbs?