You use the imperfect tense (aka past continuous) to describe ongoing actions in the past.
"Was walking" is in the past continuous tense. It describes an action that was ongoing in the past at a specific point in time.
"Were finding" is the past continuous tense.
The past continuous tense of "go" is "was/were going." It is used to describe an action that was ongoing in the past. For example, you might say, "I was going to the store when it started to rain."
"Were asking" is in the past progressive tense. We/you/they were asking.
All continuous tenses show an ongoing action.The past continuous is formed with was/were + present participle (I'll use "walking for my examples):I was walkingWe were walkingYou were walkingHe/she was walkingThey were walkingThe present continuous is formed with am/is/are + present participle:I am walkingWe are walkingYou are walkingHe/she is walkingThey are walkingThe future continuous is formed with will + be + present participle:I will be walkingWe will be walkingYou will be walkingHe/she will be walkingThey will be walkingPresent participles are the -ing form of a verb.
Yes, past continuous tense is the same as past progressive tense. It is used to indicate an action that was ongoing or in progress in the past. Both terms refer to the same grammatical concept.
'Had been laughing' is in the past perfect continuous tense. This tense is used to describe an action that started in the past, continued for a period of time, and was still ongoing when another action occurred.
The three kinds of past tense are simple past, past continuous, and past perfect. Simple past is used to describe a completed action at a specific time, past continuous describes an action that was ongoing in the past, and past perfect is used to show that one action in the past happened before another.
This is the imperfect tense. (verb)= present tense (verb)ed= perfect tense was (verb)ing= imperfect tense Perfect and imperfect are both forms of the past tense.
The verb tense of "he had been born" is past perfect continuous. It indicates an action that was ongoing in the past with a sense of completion.
The word "ongoing" doesn't have a past tense as it's not a verb.
Past continuous tense:Was/Were seeing.Present continuous tense:I am seeing.You/we/they are seeing.He/she/it is seeing.Future continuous tense:Will be seeing.