 
2. THE PRESENT TENSE
THE PRESENT CONTINUOUS
In English, there is a second form of the present tense. It is used
to show that an action is taking place now, at this moment in time.
It is formed by using the verb'to be' and adding 'ing' to the main
stem of the verb.
She is feeding the fish. (now)
He is walking to the farm. (now)
Notice the total difference in meaning between the two forms.
| She feeds the fish. |
(This means that she does it every
day, but is probably not doing it at this moment.) |
| She is feeding the fish. |
(This means that she is doing
it exactly at this moment, but it does not mean that she does
it every day.) |
Spelling of the present continuous 'ing' forms
| Regular |
| look |
looking |
They are looking at the fish scales. |
| open |
opening |
She is opening the sack of fish
food. |
Verbs ending in 'e' |
| take |
taking |
You are taking a long time to open
the sack of food. |
| give |
giving |
|
| write |
writing |
|
| prepare |
preparing |
|
| examine |
examining |
|
Verbs ending in one consonant |
| get |
getting |
The technician is getting the equipment
ready for the blood samples. |
| stop |
stopping |
|
Verbs ending in 'ie' |
| lie |
lying |
The fish is lying on the table. (one fish) |
| die |
dying |
The fish are dying from lack of oxygen. (several
fish) |
Asking questions and making negative statements
We also ask questions and make negative statements, in the present
continuous.
When we ask questions in the present continuous, we change the word
order.
| What are you doing? |
I am not preparing the sample yet because I am
looking in the lab for a test tube.
|
| What is the fish doing? |
The fish is swimming in the water.
|
| Where is the technician going? |
He is not going to the laboratory. He is going
to make a telephone call. |
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