What is the difference between : “ I turned around and saw X” and “ I was turning around and saw X” ( Simple past vs past continous) The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are Inspecial usage of the past simple?Past perfect and simple perfect differencePresent perfect or past simple - “the best movie I (saw/'ve seen) this year”Difference in meaning: past perfect and simple pastCan the choice between Present Perfect vs Past Simple be influenced by external events?Why past perfect and not simple past was used in this case?Difference between simple past and past perfect in one sentenceThe use and difference of simple future perfect tense and simple future perfect continous tenseLearning about the difference between past simple and past perfectDifference between Past Simple and Past Continuous for a past action

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What is the difference between : “ I turned around and saw X” and “ I was turning around and saw X” ( Simple past vs past continous)



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are Inspecial usage of the past simple?Past perfect and simple perfect differencePresent perfect or past simple - “the best movie I (saw/'ve seen) this year”Difference in meaning: past perfect and simple pastCan the choice between Present Perfect vs Past Simple be influenced by external events?Why past perfect and not simple past was used in this case?Difference between simple past and past perfect in one sentenceThe use and difference of simple future perfect tense and simple future perfect continous tenseLearning about the difference between past simple and past perfectDifference between Past Simple and Past Continuous for a past action



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-1















I would assume the difference is minor, in the former I finished the action of turning around and then saw X. In the latter I saw X while turning around. However one would certainly stop turning, when one sees a familiar face. It would be ridiculous to keep on turning. So the logic in the latter case is somewhat flawed. In addition the use of "and" in the latter case is a mistake, isn't it?










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  • 1





    Who says you would stop turning? If I was turning around to address X, and I saw Y, I would still turn all the way to address X.

    – oerkelens
    Feb 13 '18 at 7:31











  • So you agree to my assumptions until that point ? @oerkelens

    – ganto
    Feb 13 '18 at 8:04











  • 'Context is everything' as someone once said. If you're doing a manoeuvre during a driving lesson, which can be way other than punctive, "I was turning around and saw X” may be exactly what you want. But I'd say that bodily turning round is usually approximated to as a punctive event, so I'd use 'I turned around and saw X' even if I merely caught a glimpse when I'd completed 1/3 of the 180 degrees.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Feb 13 '18 at 9:29











  • It would depend on the intention you had when turning around, even if you stopped turning when you saw X. For example "I was turning around to look at the sea when I saw Mary, we ran to each other and kissed" as opposed to "I heard the sound of a gun being cocked, I turned around and saw Blofeld pointing a revolver in my direction". In the first case your intention changes when you see a loved one in passing, in the second you complete the action before realising that you are being threatened by a cricket commentator with a gun.

    – BoldBen
    Jul 14 '18 at 9:04

















-1















I would assume the difference is minor, in the former I finished the action of turning around and then saw X. In the latter I saw X while turning around. However one would certainly stop turning, when one sees a familiar face. It would be ridiculous to keep on turning. So the logic in the latter case is somewhat flawed. In addition the use of "and" in the latter case is a mistake, isn't it?










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 3 hours ago


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










  • 1





    Who says you would stop turning? If I was turning around to address X, and I saw Y, I would still turn all the way to address X.

    – oerkelens
    Feb 13 '18 at 7:31











  • So you agree to my assumptions until that point ? @oerkelens

    – ganto
    Feb 13 '18 at 8:04











  • 'Context is everything' as someone once said. If you're doing a manoeuvre during a driving lesson, which can be way other than punctive, "I was turning around and saw X” may be exactly what you want. But I'd say that bodily turning round is usually approximated to as a punctive event, so I'd use 'I turned around and saw X' even if I merely caught a glimpse when I'd completed 1/3 of the 180 degrees.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Feb 13 '18 at 9:29











  • It would depend on the intention you had when turning around, even if you stopped turning when you saw X. For example "I was turning around to look at the sea when I saw Mary, we ran to each other and kissed" as opposed to "I heard the sound of a gun being cocked, I turned around and saw Blofeld pointing a revolver in my direction". In the first case your intention changes when you see a loved one in passing, in the second you complete the action before realising that you are being threatened by a cricket commentator with a gun.

    – BoldBen
    Jul 14 '18 at 9:04













-1












-1








-1








I would assume the difference is minor, in the former I finished the action of turning around and then saw X. In the latter I saw X while turning around. However one would certainly stop turning, when one sees a familiar face. It would be ridiculous to keep on turning. So the logic in the latter case is somewhat flawed. In addition the use of "and" in the latter case is a mistake, isn't it?










share|improve this question














I would assume the difference is minor, in the former I finished the action of turning around and then saw X. In the latter I saw X while turning around. However one would certainly stop turning, when one sees a familiar face. It would be ridiculous to keep on turning. So the logic in the latter case is somewhat flawed. In addition the use of "and" in the latter case is a mistake, isn't it?







grammar past-tense simple-past logic






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











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share|improve this question










asked Feb 13 '18 at 7:19









gantoganto

1




1





bumped to the homepage by Community 3 hours ago


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 3 hours ago


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









  • 1





    Who says you would stop turning? If I was turning around to address X, and I saw Y, I would still turn all the way to address X.

    – oerkelens
    Feb 13 '18 at 7:31











  • So you agree to my assumptions until that point ? @oerkelens

    – ganto
    Feb 13 '18 at 8:04











  • 'Context is everything' as someone once said. If you're doing a manoeuvre during a driving lesson, which can be way other than punctive, "I was turning around and saw X” may be exactly what you want. But I'd say that bodily turning round is usually approximated to as a punctive event, so I'd use 'I turned around and saw X' even if I merely caught a glimpse when I'd completed 1/3 of the 180 degrees.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Feb 13 '18 at 9:29











  • It would depend on the intention you had when turning around, even if you stopped turning when you saw X. For example "I was turning around to look at the sea when I saw Mary, we ran to each other and kissed" as opposed to "I heard the sound of a gun being cocked, I turned around and saw Blofeld pointing a revolver in my direction". In the first case your intention changes when you see a loved one in passing, in the second you complete the action before realising that you are being threatened by a cricket commentator with a gun.

    – BoldBen
    Jul 14 '18 at 9:04












  • 1





    Who says you would stop turning? If I was turning around to address X, and I saw Y, I would still turn all the way to address X.

    – oerkelens
    Feb 13 '18 at 7:31











  • So you agree to my assumptions until that point ? @oerkelens

    – ganto
    Feb 13 '18 at 8:04











  • 'Context is everything' as someone once said. If you're doing a manoeuvre during a driving lesson, which can be way other than punctive, "I was turning around and saw X” may be exactly what you want. But I'd say that bodily turning round is usually approximated to as a punctive event, so I'd use 'I turned around and saw X' even if I merely caught a glimpse when I'd completed 1/3 of the 180 degrees.

    – Edwin Ashworth
    Feb 13 '18 at 9:29











  • It would depend on the intention you had when turning around, even if you stopped turning when you saw X. For example "I was turning around to look at the sea when I saw Mary, we ran to each other and kissed" as opposed to "I heard the sound of a gun being cocked, I turned around and saw Blofeld pointing a revolver in my direction". In the first case your intention changes when you see a loved one in passing, in the second you complete the action before realising that you are being threatened by a cricket commentator with a gun.

    – BoldBen
    Jul 14 '18 at 9:04







1




1





Who says you would stop turning? If I was turning around to address X, and I saw Y, I would still turn all the way to address X.

– oerkelens
Feb 13 '18 at 7:31





Who says you would stop turning? If I was turning around to address X, and I saw Y, I would still turn all the way to address X.

– oerkelens
Feb 13 '18 at 7:31













So you agree to my assumptions until that point ? @oerkelens

– ganto
Feb 13 '18 at 8:04





So you agree to my assumptions until that point ? @oerkelens

– ganto
Feb 13 '18 at 8:04













'Context is everything' as someone once said. If you're doing a manoeuvre during a driving lesson, which can be way other than punctive, "I was turning around and saw X” may be exactly what you want. But I'd say that bodily turning round is usually approximated to as a punctive event, so I'd use 'I turned around and saw X' even if I merely caught a glimpse when I'd completed 1/3 of the 180 degrees.

– Edwin Ashworth
Feb 13 '18 at 9:29





'Context is everything' as someone once said. If you're doing a manoeuvre during a driving lesson, which can be way other than punctive, "I was turning around and saw X” may be exactly what you want. But I'd say that bodily turning round is usually approximated to as a punctive event, so I'd use 'I turned around and saw X' even if I merely caught a glimpse when I'd completed 1/3 of the 180 degrees.

– Edwin Ashworth
Feb 13 '18 at 9:29













It would depend on the intention you had when turning around, even if you stopped turning when you saw X. For example "I was turning around to look at the sea when I saw Mary, we ran to each other and kissed" as opposed to "I heard the sound of a gun being cocked, I turned around and saw Blofeld pointing a revolver in my direction". In the first case your intention changes when you see a loved one in passing, in the second you complete the action before realising that you are being threatened by a cricket commentator with a gun.

– BoldBen
Jul 14 '18 at 9:04





It would depend on the intention you had when turning around, even if you stopped turning when you saw X. For example "I was turning around to look at the sea when I saw Mary, we ran to each other and kissed" as opposed to "I heard the sound of a gun being cocked, I turned around and saw Blofeld pointing a revolver in my direction". In the first case your intention changes when you see a loved one in passing, in the second you complete the action before realising that you are being threatened by a cricket commentator with a gun.

– BoldBen
Jul 14 '18 at 9:04










1 Answer
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oldest

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1














Basically we use "ing" form of verbs (continues or progressive form) to say that we were doing something while another action takes place. EG. I was taking a bath when the telefon rang.



I turned around and saw Mr.X - Simple Past



I was turning around when she asked me. - Progressive



Only "Stative Verbs" as, like, love, agree, and some others would not be used in ing (progressive form) cause they are states/stative and not dynamic.






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    1 Answer
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    active

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    active

    oldest

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    1














    Basically we use "ing" form of verbs (continues or progressive form) to say that we were doing something while another action takes place. EG. I was taking a bath when the telefon rang.



    I turned around and saw Mr.X - Simple Past



    I was turning around when she asked me. - Progressive



    Only "Stative Verbs" as, like, love, agree, and some others would not be used in ing (progressive form) cause they are states/stative and not dynamic.






    share|improve this answer



























      1














      Basically we use "ing" form of verbs (continues or progressive form) to say that we were doing something while another action takes place. EG. I was taking a bath when the telefon rang.



      I turned around and saw Mr.X - Simple Past



      I was turning around when she asked me. - Progressive



      Only "Stative Verbs" as, like, love, agree, and some others would not be used in ing (progressive form) cause they are states/stative and not dynamic.






      share|improve this answer

























        1












        1








        1







        Basically we use "ing" form of verbs (continues or progressive form) to say that we were doing something while another action takes place. EG. I was taking a bath when the telefon rang.



        I turned around and saw Mr.X - Simple Past



        I was turning around when she asked me. - Progressive



        Only "Stative Verbs" as, like, love, agree, and some others would not be used in ing (progressive form) cause they are states/stative and not dynamic.






        share|improve this answer













        Basically we use "ing" form of verbs (continues or progressive form) to say that we were doing something while another action takes place. EG. I was taking a bath when the telefon rang.



        I turned around and saw Mr.X - Simple Past



        I was turning around when she asked me. - Progressive



        Only "Stative Verbs" as, like, love, agree, and some others would not be used in ing (progressive form) cause they are states/stative and not dynamic.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Feb 13 '18 at 17:40









        FrankMKFrankMK

        5101416




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