I think the main way to show habitual actions in the past is with 'used to + verb':
I used to buy my lunch at school.
A past simple sentence can also show past habitual action:
When I was young I walked to school.
Was is the past tense of is.
The past perfect tense.
Past tense means that the action happened in the past.
"Had gone" is an example of the past perfect tense. This tense is used to indicate that an action was completed before another action or point in the past. It typically combines the past participle of a verb (in this case, "gone") with "had." For example, in the sentence "She had gone to the store before it started raining," the action of going to the store was completed before the rain started.
The simple past tense.
The word "would" is considered to be in the past tense when used to indicate a conditional action or event that may happen in the future. It can also be used in the present tense in certain contexts, such as expressing a habitual action or a polite request.
"Were fighting" is the imperfect tense of the verb "to fight". The imperfect indicates an ongoing or habitual action in the past that does not have a specified time frame.
No, it is an example of the past progressive tense. "You are speaking." is the present progressive tense.
Was is the past tense of is.
The verb "had used" is in the past perfect tense and is used to indicate an action that was completed before another action in the past. For example: "She had used the computer before she left." The verb "have had" is in the present perfect tense and is used to show that an action started in the past and is still relevant in the present. For example: "I have had this phone for three years."
The past imperfect tense (or just imperfect tense) is used to describe an action in the past that is recognized as unfinished or continuous, which contrasts that of the preterite tense which recognizes an action in the past as being completed. English doesn't have an imperfect tense. A rough example of the imperfect tense in English would be "I was reading". The verb "was" implies that although I was reading sometime in the past, I didn't necessarily finish or the action got interrupted.
The past perfect tense shows an action in the distant past eg. I had eaten cereal for breakfast yesterday. The present perfect tense shows an action in the recent past, eg. I have just eaten my lunch.
The past perfect tense.
The past tense of "walk" is "walked" and the present tense is "walk." The past tense is used to describe an action that has already happened, while the present tense is used to describe an action that is currently happening or is regularly done. For example, "I walked to the store yesterday" (past tense) vs. "I walk to the store every day" (present tense).
The most common tenses used with "for" are present, past, and present perfect. Present tense is used for general truths or habitual actions, past tense to refer to finished actions in the past, and present perfect to emphasize the duration of an action starting in the past and continuing up to the present.
"had felt" is in the past perfect tense. It is used to show an action that occurred before another action in the past.
Time!'I was running' (past continuous) tells us that the action was in the past and has finished.'I am running' (present continuous) tells us that the action started at some time in the past and is still continuing at the present time.