Present Continuous
Present Simple
Present Perfect Continuous
Present Perfect
Past Simple
Past Perfect
Past Perfect Continuous
Future Simple
Future Continuous
Future Perfect
Future Perfect Continuous
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
NavigationUser loginStrictly about Tenses:
Books May interest you:Guestbook English Grammar:
Conditionals
|
Present ContinuousIf you're here for the first time, you may want to see the list of things that will make browsing this website more beneficial.
We use the Present Continuous (Progressive) tense when talking about actions that are happening at the moment (present or temporary activity) or which will be done in the future (future arrangement). To form sentences in this tense, you should know these:
Examples: Read about exceptions.
Use
USE 2 (future arrangements) might seem a little confusing to an ESL learner because it's completely different from USE 1. Therefore, from my experience, ESL learners tend to make a lot of mistakes as they begin to use it. One mistake is to use the Future Simple to express future arrangements, while the correct tense would be the Present Continuous or the going to form.
Form
Positive sentences:
Questions (interrogative sentences):
Negative sentences:
Remember that you can also use the Present Continuous to show your irritation over something or somebody in the present. E.g. She is always asking me stupid questions.
Other websites about PCPresent Continuous - short review Check your understanding!Did not find what you were looking for? Try searching Google |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
When one uses a sentence like "He could not be selected, had it not been for his friends!" What kind of structure is this and where can I find more information about it?
The sentence could be rewritten as:
- he could not be selected, if it had not been for his friends
So it's a conditional sentence that uses the inversion to replace "if" in the if-clause (it is completely correct). As in:
- Were I more intelligent, ...
As far as the meaning of this sentences is concerned, the if-clause means more or less this:
- ..., if my friend hadn't helped him out / advised him / supported him.
I would be happy to hear from you again.
???
- he could not be selected, if it had not been for his friends
That is wrong isn't it?
- he could not have been selected, had it not been for his friends
That makes more sense but it still sounds bad. (Double negative)
- He could not have been selected, were it not for his friends.
Is that better?
"He could not have been selected, were it not for his friends."
Yes, I believe this sentence is the most correct of all.
Some readers may wonder why it's "were it not", and not "had it not been". I think this is because it's usually more natural to use the Past Simple in such contexts. Especially, when we speak about things that are still valid, as opposed to things that happened once e.g.:
"He could have been eaten by sharks, had it not been for a ship that rescued him"
"He could have been eaten by sharks, were it not for his amazing swimming skills"
Do you agree?
OMG I LOVE THIS WEBSITE
It says we cannot use "like" in present continuous form but I noticed some use it in sentences like "I am liking you". Is this correct?
Mark's explanation to your doubt is right. This is called the inversion of the third conditional sentences. In any third conditional sentences you can use 'had' in replace to 'if' and the meaning more emphasatic than the normal one.
Is it Past Perfect Tense?
Hi!
I was listening to the cure song "killing an arab" and I got wondering, what tense is this? Can I start a sentence with a verb plus ing form? Is it present continuous?
"killing" (without a subject before the verb) probably acts as a noun here (=gerund).
"If Tom had told the police the truth, he would not have been punished." What is the form of the verb in this sentence? Thank you if you can answer my inquiry..
The title of the Cure song, "Killing an Arab", is not a gerund. It is part of a longer sentence which is in the present simple tense.
"I am the stranger killing an Arab."
In this form, the sentence is present simple: I am. Subject + Verb1 + Complement (noun) + Gerund Phrase (participle phrase as an adjective in this case).
This differentiates him from other strangers, such as the stranger eating a sandwich or the stranger riding a bicycle.
However, the gerund form may be used thus:
"Killing an Arab is just about one of my favorite daily activities."
The act of killing an Arab is now the subject.