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		Ask for help > The use of "while"     
			
		 The use of "while" 
		
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 teacher drica
 
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							| The use of "while" 
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							| I have a question: Is this sentence correct "While we cooked dinner last night, my sister had a shower" ?. I know I should use  While we were cooking dinner last night, my sister was having a shower. But is the first sentence ok???   Thanks for your help.  |  15 May 2017      
					
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 FrauSue
 
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							| Your first sentence sounds fine to me. It suggests that your cooking and her shower took more or less the same amount of time.  |  15 May 2017     
					
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 maryse pey�
 
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							| Well I would say "My sister had a shower while we were cooking dinner last night."   The questions I need to answer are "Are the 2 actions of the same length ?" If yes you will use BE + -ing for both verbs.   If one of the 2 actions longer than the other - ask yourself which action is the longer and which one is the shorter ? - then you will use BE + -ing for the longer action and a "simple" (= non -ing)  tense for the shorter action.   Hope this answers your question. |  15 May 2017     
					
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 Minka
 
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							| I think both sentences are correct, but past continuous is more common with "while". |  15 May 2017     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| All of the answers above are correct. As I �ve said a few times here, the continuous tenses are used when we want to specify the duration of an event, focusing on the activity itself as a process.   Your original sentence is correct if you just want to describe two events in the past, which is what the simple past is used for.   Bruce  |  15 May 2017     
					
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