1) James walked into the bank and received the message at the same time
2) James walked into the bank and then received the message.
The answer choice can vary depending on the possibility.
Does the adverb 'JUST' play a crucial role in understanding the context?[/quote]
In this case the past perfect "had walked" makes the use of "when" necessary.
James
walked into the bank
and then received the message... correct (Walking into happened before receiving)
James
had walked into the bank
when he received the message... correct. (Walking into happened before receiving)
James
had walked into the bank
and then received the message... wrong. (redundacy: "and then" implies the sequence - past perfect not required)
James
walked into the bank
when he received the message... doubtful (meaning changed: Walking into and receiving happened exactly simultaneouly. Preferable would be "was walking into" - past continuous depicts a background event when another event happened.)[/quote]
Hi
cheque had finally been cleared. Can you please explain why is past perfect used here?[/quote]
I'm not an expert but if you look at the timeline of events in this sentence, it will make sense.
James had walked into the bank ---- He's already in the bank
He received a message ----- He received the message after he walked into the bank.
His cheque had been cleared ---- This basically means, the cheque was cleared before he received the message.
And that's why we've used Past Perfect here. Past Perfect is basically used for 2 past events in which one event had been completed before the other event took place.
For e.g.
The car
had broken down before the mechanic
fixed it.
Or James
had been hungry before he
ate a sandwich.
Hope this helps.[/quote]
Thank you so much for the help people. I was clear about the usage of had for sequencing of events.
The part where I am confused is right now the statement has 2 past perfect usages.
'James had walked' & 'cheque had been cleared'. Doesn't that create a confusion of time sequencing? Or are the 2 events unrelated?