English, asked by gomas4044, 4 hours ago

why in the habitual past they use (be)
when and why​

Answers

Answered by begumshakina27
1

Answer:

The habitual past is indicated most frequently by the semi-auxiliary verb used to, the auxiliary would, or the simple past tense of a verb. Compare with the past progressive, which instead relies on "to be" to indicate continuous or ongoing action in the past.

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