Speaking: Grammar in Speaking B1 - Lesson 3: Using "used to" for Past Habits

Lesson: Past Habits with Used To We use the structure "used to" followed by a base verb to communicate repetitive actions, structural habits, or long-term states that occurred regularly in the past but have since changed or stopped completely in the present era. Core Sentence Frameworks: Affirmative: Subject + used to + Base Verb (e.g., I used to draw on paper.) Negative: Subject + didn't use to + Base Verb (e.g., I didn't use to like coffee.) Question: Did + Subject + use to + Base Verb? (e.g., Did you use to watch cartoons?) Linguistic Restrictions: Always drop the trailing letter "d" from "used" when formulating negative structures with "didn't" or interrogative pathways starting with "Did". Furthermore, never use this expression for events that occurred exactly one single time; use the past simple instead. Please enable JavaScript to view the interactive auditory nodes, performance testing sections, and summary generation tools…