Present Continuous

20 min

Learning Goals

  • Form the present continuous correctly
  • Distinguish between simple present and present continuous
  • Know which verbs cannot be used in continuous form

Present Continuous

The present continuous (also called present progressive) describes actions happening now or around now.

Formation

Affirmative

am/is/are + verb-ing

SubjectBe + Verb-ing
Iam working
He / She / Itis working
You / We / Theyare working

Examples:

  • I am reading a book.
  • She is cooking dinner.
  • They are playing football.

Spelling Rules for -ing

Most verbs: add -ing

  • work → working
  • read → reading
  • play → playing

Verbs ending in -e: drop -e, add -ing

  • make → making
  • write → writing
  • live → living

Short verbs (CVC): double final consonant

  • sit → sitting
  • run → running
  • stop → stopping
  • swim → swimming

Verbs ending in -ie: change to -ying

  • lie → lying
  • die → dying

Verbs ending in -ee: just add -ing

  • see → seeing
  • agree → agreeing

Negative

am/is/are + not + verb-ing

  • I am not (I’m not) working.
  • She is not (isn’t) cooking.
  • They are not (aren’t) playing.

Questions

Am/Is/Are + subject + verb-ing?

  • Are you working?
  • Is she cooking?
  • What are they doing?

When to Use Present Continuous

1. Actions Happening Now

  • I am writing an email. (right now)
  • She is talking on the phone. (at this moment)
  • Look! It is raining!

2. Temporary Situations

  • I am staying with friends this week.
  • She is working on a new project.
  • They are living in a hotel until they find a flat.

3. Changing/Developing Situations

  • The weather is getting colder.
  • Your English is improving.
  • The world is changing rapidly.

4. Future Arrangements

  • I am meeting John tomorrow.
  • She is flying to Paris next week.
  • We are having a party on Saturday.

5. Annoying Habits (with “always”)

  • He is always complaining! (negative emotion)
  • She is always losing her keys.
  • You are always interrupting me!

Simple Present vs. Present Continuous

Simple PresentPresent Continuous
Habits, routinesActions happening now
Permanent situationsTemporary situations
Facts, truthsChanging situations
SchedulesArrangements

Examples:

  • I work in a bank. (permanent job)
  • I am working from home today. (temporary)
  • She lives in Paris. (permanent)
  • She is living with her parents. (temporary)
  • Water boils at 100°C. (fact)
  • The water is boiling. (right now)

Stative Verbs (No Continuous)

Some verbs describe states, not actions. They are not usually used in continuous form:

Mental States

  • know, understand, believe, think (= opinion), remember, forget

Emotions

  • like, love, hate, want, need, prefer

Senses

  • see, hear, smell, taste, feel (involuntary)

Possession

  • have (= possess), own, belong, possess

Other

  • be, seem, appear, cost, mean, contain

Correct:

  • I know the answer. (not I am knowing)
  • She loves chocolate. (not She is loving)
  • This costs $10. (not This is costing)

Exceptions

Some verbs have both stative and active meanings:

Stative (no -ing)Active (-ing possible)
I think it’s good. (opinion)I am thinking about it. (mental process)
I have a car. (possess)I am having dinner. (eating)
I see you. (perceive)I am seeing a doctor. (meeting)
It tastes good. (has flavor)She is tasting the soup. (testing)

Practice

Choose the correct form:

  1. “She ___ (work) in a bank.” (permanent) → She works in a bank.

  2. “She ___ (work) on a report right now.” → She is working on a report right now.

  3. “I ___ (not/understand) this.” → I don’t understand this. (stative verb)

  4. “What ___ you ___ (do) tomorrow evening?” → What are you doing tomorrow evening?

Verb Tenses Essentials
10 of 12 lessons