were

were — 動詞

1. Were is the past-tense form of the verb 'be' that you use when the subject is 'y

1.動詞不及物A1
釋義

曾是

be 的過去式,用於複數主詞與假設語氣

Were is the past-tense form of the verb 'be' that you use when the subject is 'you', 'we', 'they', or a plural noun. It also appears in the subjunctive mood after words like 'if' and 'wish' to talk about imaginary, unreal, or desired situations.

例句

The children were playing in the garden when Walid arrived with a birthday cake.

Walid 帶著生日蛋糕抵達時,孩子們正在花園裡玩耍。

were + -ing (past continuous)

You were right about the traffic, Niran — taking the back road saved us thirty minutes.

Niran,你說得對,車流量很大——走小路幫我們省了三十分鐘。

you were + adjective

文法句型

were + noun / adjective / prepositional phrase

were + -ing (past continuous)

were + past participle (past passive)

If + subject + were + complement (subjunctive)

I wish + subject + were + complement (subjunctive)

用法筆記

Were is the only past-tense verb form used with 'you' — 'you was' is non-standard and incorrect in formal English. In the subjunctive mood (after 'if', 'as if', 'I wish'), use 'were' even with singular subjects like 'I', 'he', 'she', or 'it'. In everyday informal speech, many speakers use 'was' instead (e.g. 'If I was you'), but 'were' is the form expected in formal writing and examinations.

常見錯誤

You was at the party last night.
You were at the party last night.
💡The pronoun 'you' always pairs with 'were' in the past tense, never with 'was'.
If I was rich, I would travel the world.' (informal)
If I were rich, I would travel the world.
💡In formal English, use 'were' for hypothetical conditions, not 'was'.
She were happy with the result.' (for factual past)
She was happy with the result.
💡Use 'was' (not 'were') with singular subjects like 'she' when stating real past facts.