How do you do present simple and continuous?
Similarly, it is asked, what is the difference of present simple and present continuous?
There is an important difference between the simple present and present continuous tenses. The simple present tense is used to talk about things that we do all the time. The present continuous tense is used to talk about things that are happening at the moment of speaking.
- To express habits, general truths, repeated actions or unchanging situations, emotions and wishes:
- To give instructions or directions:
- To express fixed arrangements, present or future:
- To express future time, after some conjunctions: after, when, before, as soon as, until:
Considering this, what is a simple present continuous tense?
The present continuous tense is formed with the subject plus the present particle form (-ing) of the main verb and the present continuous tense of the verb to be: am, is, are. One simple example of this tense is: He is swimming. Some other forms of this verb tense are: I am singing at church today.
The simple present is a verb tense with two main uses. We use the simple present tense when an action is happening right now, or when it happens regularly (or unceasingly, which is why it's sometimes called present indefinite).