Joined: 4/13/2014 Posts: 1
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How does one keep their tense consistent while writing? I've noticed that I will switch from past tense (I ran) to present (I was running). It's a bad habit that I'd like to grow out of but every time I practice it usually doesn't come out right! Any helpful tips?
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Joined: 6/7/2013 Posts: 1356
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Hi Dy--I couldn't figure out how I had missed this post last spring but then I realized you posted it about 5 days before I got married, so I guess I was a little distracted!
Anyway, what you said resonated with me because I wrote a trilogy of books in the present tense, and the ENTIRE TIME, through several drafts of each book, I made mistakes with the tense. It was kind of weird--like a subconsciously did not want to write in the present. Anyway, the way I dealt with it was by keeping that in the back of my mind when I was editing, and then having others looks it over for me to point out things I missed. I never figured out a good way to train myself to avoid making the mistake in the first place.
Have you figured out any tricks about this since then?
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Joined: 12/21/2014 Posts: 7
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I run a search in Word for the "to be" verbs. Amazing what you find from those searches. You can also use an online grammar check like Grammarly or ProWriting. Some of these sites will let you check a thousand words at a time for free.
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Joined: 6/7/2013 Posts: 1356
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Dave, love your idea of running a check for conjugations of "to be." Smart!
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Joined: 8/31/2015 Posts: 16
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Dy Young wrote:How does one keep their tense consistent while writing? I've noticed that I will switch from past tense (I ran) to present (I was running). It's a bad habit that I'd like to grow out of but every time I practice it usually doesn't come out right! Any helpful tips?
To be technical, "I was running" is not Present tense, but Past Progressive.
The Progressive tense involves action that Is, Was, or Will Be in progress at a certain time. Form it with a "be" verb + ing.
--edited by Richard Maitland on 9/4/2015, 10:44 AM--
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