Example:
Q: I'm sure you met Anne Jones at the party last night.
A: I don't remember her. What was she wearing?
My student asked why the response is "what was she wearing?" and not "what did she wear"?
Is there a clear way to explain this???

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Let me take a stab at it, but there are no guarantees! I also teach the difference between Past Progressive and Simple Past to my adult students. I tell them the first two example types are the easy ones. Then I teach them sentences of the idea, "He was eating dinner when the phone rang." It's so nice to be able to show the interruption, and how something was ongoing when the second action occurred.magpou wrote:I've spent the last few days teaching my class of adult students the Simple Past and Past Progressive tenses and it seemed that they had grasped the concept until we stumbled upon the following example. I found it difficult trying to provide a clear explanation as to why the Past Progressive is used instead of the Simple Past in the following:
Example:
Q: I'm sure you met Anne Jones at the party last night.
A: I don't remember her. What was she wearing?
My student asked why the response is "what was she wearing?" and not "what did she wear"?
Is there a clear way to explain this???