em3ry wrote: ↑06 Jan 2022 12:23
Yes I forgot about pterosaurs. "Birds" = flying warm-blooded dinosaurs.
I would suggest using "bird" as a primary word instead of "dinosaur", given that bird is a lot more common (according to the Google ngram viewer, "bird" is about 15 to 25 times more frequent than "dinosaur" in the English language). But of course it's your language, so you can do as you please!
em3ry wrote: ↑06 Jan 2022 12:58
Four more tenses
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I was someday going to fix the car
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I was going to fix the car
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I was just about to start fixing the car
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I began fixing the car
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I was fixing the car
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I finished fixing the car
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I had just fixed the car
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I had fixed the car
yesterday (or tomorrow or now) I had once fixed the car
As qwed has already stated, these are called
aspects, not tenses. A tense marks the relation of the action time to the current time, which you have explicitly marked as irrelevant. An aspect, however, marks how an action or event extends over time, which is what you're describing.