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Normally, which one would you like to choose? Past simple or past perfect?


Simple Past or Past PerfectSimple past or present perfect?Simple past vs. Past perfectPast simple vs. past perfectpast simple vs past perfectPast perfect vs. simple pastPast simple vs present perfectPast Simple with “before” instead of Present PerfectPresent Perfect with Past SimpleSimple past or past perfect-story






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








0















Now my problem was, how was I going to get back to my farm stay house? I ________ a map with me.



  1. A. didn’t bring

  2. B. hadn’t brought

  3. C. hadn’t been bringing









share|improve this question














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    0















    Now my problem was, how was I going to get back to my farm stay house? I ________ a map with me.



    1. A. didn’t bring

    2. B. hadn’t brought

    3. C. hadn’t been bringing









    share|improve this question














    bumped to the homepage by Community yesterday


    This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.

















      0












      0








      0








      Now my problem was, how was I going to get back to my farm stay house? I ________ a map with me.



      1. A. didn’t bring

      2. B. hadn’t brought

      3. C. hadn’t been bringing









      share|improve this question














      Now my problem was, how was I going to get back to my farm stay house? I ________ a map with me.



      1. A. didn’t bring

      2. B. hadn’t brought

      3. C. hadn’t been bringing






      tenses






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Mar 27 at 7:47









      Jingyu BaiJingyu Bai

      11




      11





      bumped to the homepage by Community yesterday


      This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







      bumped to the homepage by Community yesterday


      This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          0














          You cite 3 options:



          A - simple past, negative form ('did not bring')
          The positive form would be 'brought'.
          This implies that the action either took place 1 step back in the past, or that it happened regularly.
          The action you refer to (bringing a map with you) cannot have taken place at the same time as you realised you had not brought it.
          The regular act of bringing a map with you doesn't seem right - you mention 'a map', not 'the map'.



          B - past perfect, negative form ('had not brought')
          The positive form would be 'had brought'.
          This is the correct form to use as it refers to an action that started 2 steps back in the past and is completed 1 step back in the past.



          C - past continuous, negative form ('had not been bringing')
          The positive form would be 'had been bringing'
          This implies a continuous action - 'had been bringing the map while ...' which doesn't apply here.



          I hope this helps.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thanks very much @ Leon. All I confused was why not A. Your answer explained that perfectly. Normally, I will answer somebody's question about "Why cannot you get back....". --I didn't bring a map with me. If I narrative the whole sentence with "didn't bring", that means I omitted the "why". However, if there is no Why sentence or clause, I should say "I hadn't brought" cause it implies an action 1 step back in the past what I mentioned in my last words. Am I right?

            – Jingyu Bai
            Mar 27 at 10:35











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
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          1 Answer
          1






          active

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          active

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          active

          oldest

          votes









          0














          You cite 3 options:



          A - simple past, negative form ('did not bring')
          The positive form would be 'brought'.
          This implies that the action either took place 1 step back in the past, or that it happened regularly.
          The action you refer to (bringing a map with you) cannot have taken place at the same time as you realised you had not brought it.
          The regular act of bringing a map with you doesn't seem right - you mention 'a map', not 'the map'.



          B - past perfect, negative form ('had not brought')
          The positive form would be 'had brought'.
          This is the correct form to use as it refers to an action that started 2 steps back in the past and is completed 1 step back in the past.



          C - past continuous, negative form ('had not been bringing')
          The positive form would be 'had been bringing'
          This implies a continuous action - 'had been bringing the map while ...' which doesn't apply here.



          I hope this helps.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thanks very much @ Leon. All I confused was why not A. Your answer explained that perfectly. Normally, I will answer somebody's question about "Why cannot you get back....". --I didn't bring a map with me. If I narrative the whole sentence with "didn't bring", that means I omitted the "why". However, if there is no Why sentence or clause, I should say "I hadn't brought" cause it implies an action 1 step back in the past what I mentioned in my last words. Am I right?

            – Jingyu Bai
            Mar 27 at 10:35















          0














          You cite 3 options:



          A - simple past, negative form ('did not bring')
          The positive form would be 'brought'.
          This implies that the action either took place 1 step back in the past, or that it happened regularly.
          The action you refer to (bringing a map with you) cannot have taken place at the same time as you realised you had not brought it.
          The regular act of bringing a map with you doesn't seem right - you mention 'a map', not 'the map'.



          B - past perfect, negative form ('had not brought')
          The positive form would be 'had brought'.
          This is the correct form to use as it refers to an action that started 2 steps back in the past and is completed 1 step back in the past.



          C - past continuous, negative form ('had not been bringing')
          The positive form would be 'had been bringing'
          This implies a continuous action - 'had been bringing the map while ...' which doesn't apply here.



          I hope this helps.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thanks very much @ Leon. All I confused was why not A. Your answer explained that perfectly. Normally, I will answer somebody's question about "Why cannot you get back....". --I didn't bring a map with me. If I narrative the whole sentence with "didn't bring", that means I omitted the "why". However, if there is no Why sentence or clause, I should say "I hadn't brought" cause it implies an action 1 step back in the past what I mentioned in my last words. Am I right?

            – Jingyu Bai
            Mar 27 at 10:35













          0












          0








          0







          You cite 3 options:



          A - simple past, negative form ('did not bring')
          The positive form would be 'brought'.
          This implies that the action either took place 1 step back in the past, or that it happened regularly.
          The action you refer to (bringing a map with you) cannot have taken place at the same time as you realised you had not brought it.
          The regular act of bringing a map with you doesn't seem right - you mention 'a map', not 'the map'.



          B - past perfect, negative form ('had not brought')
          The positive form would be 'had brought'.
          This is the correct form to use as it refers to an action that started 2 steps back in the past and is completed 1 step back in the past.



          C - past continuous, negative form ('had not been bringing')
          The positive form would be 'had been bringing'
          This implies a continuous action - 'had been bringing the map while ...' which doesn't apply here.



          I hope this helps.






          share|improve this answer













          You cite 3 options:



          A - simple past, negative form ('did not bring')
          The positive form would be 'brought'.
          This implies that the action either took place 1 step back in the past, or that it happened regularly.
          The action you refer to (bringing a map with you) cannot have taken place at the same time as you realised you had not brought it.
          The regular act of bringing a map with you doesn't seem right - you mention 'a map', not 'the map'.



          B - past perfect, negative form ('had not brought')
          The positive form would be 'had brought'.
          This is the correct form to use as it refers to an action that started 2 steps back in the past and is completed 1 step back in the past.



          C - past continuous, negative form ('had not been bringing')
          The positive form would be 'had been bringing'
          This implies a continuous action - 'had been bringing the map while ...' which doesn't apply here.



          I hope this helps.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 27 at 8:13









          Leon ConradLeon Conrad

          3,40121124




          3,40121124












          • Thanks very much @ Leon. All I confused was why not A. Your answer explained that perfectly. Normally, I will answer somebody's question about "Why cannot you get back....". --I didn't bring a map with me. If I narrative the whole sentence with "didn't bring", that means I omitted the "why". However, if there is no Why sentence or clause, I should say "I hadn't brought" cause it implies an action 1 step back in the past what I mentioned in my last words. Am I right?

            – Jingyu Bai
            Mar 27 at 10:35

















          • Thanks very much @ Leon. All I confused was why not A. Your answer explained that perfectly. Normally, I will answer somebody's question about "Why cannot you get back....". --I didn't bring a map with me. If I narrative the whole sentence with "didn't bring", that means I omitted the "why". However, if there is no Why sentence or clause, I should say "I hadn't brought" cause it implies an action 1 step back in the past what I mentioned in my last words. Am I right?

            – Jingyu Bai
            Mar 27 at 10:35
















          Thanks very much @ Leon. All I confused was why not A. Your answer explained that perfectly. Normally, I will answer somebody's question about "Why cannot you get back....". --I didn't bring a map with me. If I narrative the whole sentence with "didn't bring", that means I omitted the "why". However, if there is no Why sentence or clause, I should say "I hadn't brought" cause it implies an action 1 step back in the past what I mentioned in my last words. Am I right?

          – Jingyu Bai
          Mar 27 at 10:35





          Thanks very much @ Leon. All I confused was why not A. Your answer explained that perfectly. Normally, I will answer somebody's question about "Why cannot you get back....". --I didn't bring a map with me. If I narrative the whole sentence with "didn't bring", that means I omitted the "why". However, if there is no Why sentence or clause, I should say "I hadn't brought" cause it implies an action 1 step back in the past what I mentioned in my last words. Am I right?

          – Jingyu Bai
          Mar 27 at 10:35

















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