Universal Truth is Always Written in Simple Continuous Tense
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Present Tense: General Truth vs At the Moment
State facts versus observations
Fact vs. Observation
GENERAL TRUTH — FACT |
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The simple present tense is used to state fact, how things exist or behave (always/ permanently). Few, if any, adverbs are used for this "timeless tense". The action or state is endless, enduring, everlasting. |
The earth turns 360º every day. (fact) The moon orbits the earth. (permanent) |
The oceans are deep and cold. The oceans move in circular currents. |
The land moves on plates. Earthquakes occur often. |
Antarctica is covered with ice. The South Pole has strong winds. |
Wind blows across the land. Wind moves because of differences in air pressure. |
Rain gives water to life. Rain falls in the winter. |
Plants grow in soil. Plants give us oxygen. |
People depend on earth's resources. People exercise for good health. (in general) |
Time passes quickly. Daylight Savings time begins in spring. |
AT THE MOMENT—OBSERVATION |
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The present progressive tense is used to state an observation such as an action happening at the moment or a temporary change from the usual. Timing may be specified with adverbs or understood from context. |
The earth is turning right now as we speak. (observation) The earth is changing due to global warming. (a change from the usual) |
The oceans are warming. (a change from the usual) The currents are moving farther north. |
The plates are constantly moving. Earthquakes are occurring more frequently. |
The polar ice is melting fast. Polar bears are struggling to live. |
The wind is blowing umbrellas backwards. The wind is coming from the north. |
This rain is giving us the water we need. Rain is falling on my head. (observation) |
My plants are growing well. (observation) One plant is getting taller. |
These people are running for good health.(observation) Some people are wearing silly costumes.(temporarily) |
Time is passing slowly. Daylight Savings Time is ending this weekend. |
Present Adverbs (time expressions)
Specify the timing of an action or activity
Present Time Expressions — definite vs. indefinite timing
DEFINITE TIMING "HAPPENING AROUND NOW" | |
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Adverbial expressions with definite timing are used when actions can be marked on a timeline (clock/calendar); they have endpoints/goals. Compare: I am walking to class today. (definite timing, it ends when I arrive at class) to I walk to class. (indefinite timing, "timeless", no endpoint, a routine). | |
WITH PROGRESSIVE VERBS | WITH PROGRESSIVE VERBS |
I am walking to class now. *I walk to class now.¹ | I am walking to class today. *I walk to class today.¹ |
NOW | THIS ... |
now (just now, right now) currently (presently) | today / tonight (word origin – this day, this night ) |
at the moment (for now, for the time being, for now, at present) | this month (time not passed: morning, evening, week, semester, this spring, year, decade, century) |
as we speak (expression: now) | these moments (time not passed: weeks, months, semesters, years) |
still (with a negative verb: no longer) Used with progressive. | this Tuesday (June 20, June 20, 2020) (in the current week) |
INDEFINITE TIMING "HAPPENING SOMETIME" | |
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Adverbial expressions with indefinite timing are used when activities or states happen "sometime", not related to a timeline. The precise time is not important. The focus is on the activity or state. These adverbs express duration (a period of time) or repetition (the interval of occurrence). | |
BOTH PROGRESSIVE & NON | BOTH PROGRESSIVE & NON |
I am walking to class temporarily. I walk to class during the week. | I am walking to class often. I walk to class often. |
DURATION | REPETITION |
temporarily (continuously, briefly, momentarily) [imperfective, ongoing] ⇒ Mostly progressive. | repeatedly (constantly, continuously, again and again, perpetually, eternally) ⇒ Switch to "keep" with progressive.³ |
for a moment (ten minutes, a week, a month, for a while², a little while, a day, forever) ⇒ Often present perfect. | always (routinely, customarily, usually, in general, normally, often, sometimes, hardly ever, never) |
during the week (month, year, etc.) ⇒ Mostly nonprogressive. | at night (noon, midnight, sunset) in spring (winter, summer, June, July) |
from Monday to Tuesday(1 PM to 2 PM, morning to night) ⇒ Mostly nonprogressive. | on Mondays (Tuesday, Sundays, etc.) most days (nights, weekends, etc.) |
while it is warm(a relative time: when, if, whenever, before, after) before lunch (after) | every / each / every other day (hour, day, night, week, month, year, May, spring) |
¹ adverbs like today or this month can express (1) a time-frame that includes a time greater than just the present moment. I am vacationing this month. or (2) the interval for a routine or scheduled activity. I go on vacation this month. See Scheduled Events—Routine vs. Near Future.
² for a while (PP) – can be understood in two ways: (1) having some amount of duration, or (2) being very temporary
³ keep + verb+ing – Repetition can be expressed by using the "keep" (I keep walking. He kept smiling.) The progressive with "repeatedly" (*I am walking to class repeatedly. )sounds awkward.
Specific adverbial pages: Frequency Adverbs| Preps for Time—In v. On v. At | During v. In | For-Since
Related tense pages: Past vs. Progressive | Present vs. Present Perfect Progressive | Future vs. Future Progressive (will)
Present Tense
Word Order
AUXILIARY VERB | SUBJECT | AUXILIARY VERB | MAIN VERB | ADVERB |
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STATEMENT | ||||
He (She) | plants | in the spring. | ||
They (I, We, You) | plant | in the spring. | ||
QUESTION | ||||
Does | he (she) | plant | in the spring? | |
Do | they (I, we, you) | plant | in the spring? | |
NEGATIVE | ||||
He (She) | doesn't | plant | in the spring. | |
They (I, We, You) | do n't | plant | in the spring. | |
EMPHASIS | ||||
He (She) | does | plant | in the spring! | |
They (I, We, You) | do | plant | in the spring! |
Related page: 3rd Person Agreement
Common Mistakes
Errors & Solutions
Error and Solution
ERROR |
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*The wind is blowing during the winter. |
*The earth is spinning faster than Mars. |
SOLUTION |
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The wind blows during the winter. |
The earth spins faster than Mars. |
*Yellow highlighted words are examples of incorrect usage.
► Show Grammar Notes and Works Cited ▼ Hide Grammar Notes
Grammar Notes (Advanced)
Traditional and Linguistic Descriptions
Traditional Description and Linguistic
TRADITIONAL DESCRIPTION |
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Traditional grammar diagrams 'parse' or separate sentences into parts (e.g., subject, verb, object) into mostly linear components. A line's length, position or angle indicates the relative function of the word in the sentence.. |
REED-KELLOGG SYSTEM DIAGRAM |
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LINGUISTIC DESCRIPTION |
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Linguistic tree diagrams are composed of angled brackets which mark the subject and the predicate. The sub-parts are commonly, but not always, divided into two parts. |
TREE DIAGRAM |
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Categories "Parts of Speech": N – noun; NP – noun phrase; V – verb; Aux – auxiliary; VP – verb phrase; Adj – adjective; AdjP – adjective phrase; Adv – adverb; AdvP – adverb phrase; P – preposition; PP – prepositional phrase; Det – determiner; DP – determinative phrase.
Other abbreviations: Ger – gerund; Inf – infinitive; PPart – past participle; NF – nonfinite; F – finite; Cls – clause; Subord – subordinator; Coord – coordinator; DO – direct object; IO – indirect object.
Word Functions: Subj – Subject; Pred – Predicate/Predicator – Pred; Comp – complement: elements required by an expression to complete its meaning ;Adjunct: — adjunct: elements not required by an expression to complete its meaning; Supl – supplement: a clause or phrase added to a clause but not closely related to the central idea or structure of the main clause.
Works Cited
- Azar, Betty Schrampfer, and Stacy A. Hagen. Understanding and Using English Grammar. 4th ed., Pearson Education, 2009.
- Huddleston, Rodney D., and Geoffrey K. Pullum. The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge UP, 2002.
- O'Brien, Elizabeth. "Diagramming Sentences Exercises: Chapter 1." English Grammar Revolution. 2016. english-grammar-revolution.com/english-grammar-exercise.html. Accessed on 10 Oct. 2016.
- Swan, Michael. Practical English Usage. 3rd ed., Oxford UP, 2005.
- "Sentence diagram." Wikipedia. 28 Sep. 2016. Accessed on 10 Oct. 2016.
Practice
Fact vs. Observation
Is it a general truth (fact) or an observation (observation at the moment)?
- Select the response from the list that best completes the sentence.
- Compare your response to the feedback by clicking the "Check" or the "Check 1-8" button.
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