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In the ASK Graded Readers, which present beginner-appropriate short stories, there is a frequently occurring pattern of writing with ~ます during the 'setup' of the story, and then switching to 〜ました when something important happens. The sentence containing the tense switch often starts with ある日 or similar. The story then resumes using the 〜ます form once we leave this major event.

What is happening with the tenses here--why is the story told partially in non-past and partially in past? Is it typical for Japanese stories to be told in this way, and is this pattern also used in spoken Japanese?

frog
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    Does this answer your question? [Are Japanese stories usually written in past tense or present tense?](https://japanese.stackexchange.com/questions/73868/are-japanese-stories-usually-written-in-past-tense-or-present-tense) – naruto Feb 11 '20 at 02:57
  • @naruto There is great information there, but I don't see anything that mentions whether this pattern is used in spoken language as well. – frog Feb 11 '20 at 03:09
  • Historical present by itself is [used also in spoken language](https://japanese.stackexchange.com/a/53769/5010), but since speech is not like an organized story, you probably would not see the complex pattern found in written stories. – naruto Feb 11 '20 at 03:32

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