I <got> <have been getting> ready and then <drove> <driving> over here.

Joined
Apr 8, 2024
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Russian
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Two people meet at a cafe after work. Which should B say?

A: What have you been doing?
B: Let's see. Since I saw you an hour ago?
A: Yeah.
B:
  1. I got ready and then drove over here.
  2. I was getting ready and then driving over here.
  3. I have got(ten) ready and then driven over here.
  4. I have been getting ready and then driving over here
I would go with the past simple option since those are two actions that happened one after another ("and then"), but hasn't English got that weird thing that we should keep the aspect in the answer?
I appreciate your help. 🙏
 
Did you write the whole thing yourself?
I'm not sure why that would have any effect on the result, but no, I didn't write it myself. It's from The Office.
 
I don't see how that would make any difference at all to the outcome.

the course
 
It's a legal requirement to do with copyright laws.
 
Assuming it was a TV show, B spoke one of those lines. It was not multiple choice.
 
Those are just four lines. Anybody could produce them.
I trust you're not going to prove so argumentative every time you're asked to provide the full source information of any text you did not create yourself. We have very strict copyright laws in the UK, where the forum is based, and as a user of the forum you are subject to those laws. Please remember to provide the source information in post #1 in future.
 

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