Stop tripping over irregular verbs and auxiliary rules. Learn the essential mechanics of the past simple to tell your stories with clarity and confidence.

The past simple is the fundamental building block of how we tell our stories, acting as the engine that drives narratives forward by anchoring completed actions in a specific time.
Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

Lena: Hey Miles! You know, I was thinking about how we always want to learn the flashy stuff first—like in soccer, everyone wants to practice "golazos" and trick shots, but they forget that simple passing is what actually wins games.
Miles: That is a perfect analogy, Lena. It’s the same with English. Everyone wants to master complex hypotheses, but the "past simple" is the fundamental building block. It’s how we tell our stories, whether something happened once, like "I met my wife in 1983," or something that was true for a long time, like "I lived abroad for ten years."
Lena: Right, but it’s not always as simple as just adding "-ed" to a word, is it? I always see people getting tripped up by those irregular forms or forgetting how to use "did" and "didn't."
Miles: Exactly. It’s about the mechanics of the language. So, let’s dive into the core rules for positive statements and how to handle those tricky irregular verbs.