English, asked by pk1494170, 6 months ago

structure of past continuous tense​

Answers

Answered by anjanitoanjan
3

Answer:

The past continuous tense, also known as the past progressive tense, refers to a continuing action or state that was happening at some point in the past. The past continuous tense is formed by combining the past tense of to be (i.e., was/were) with the verb's present participle (-ing word).

Answered by Anonymous
9

\huge\mathfrak{Answer}

Structure :-

 \tt { \fbox {\pink {Subject+ was/were+verb+ing+object }}}

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