Level: intermediate
We use continuous aspect:
- for something happening before and after a specific time:
He's getting on the train. (before and after the moment of speaking)
It was a quarter past ten. We were watching the news on television.
- for something happening before and after another action:
Mother will be cooking the dinner when we get home.
We were waiting for the bus when it started to rain.
- for something continuing for some time:
Everybody will be waiting for us.
They had been working hard all day.
- for something happening again and again:
They've been doing that every day this week.
The children were always shouting.
He will be practising the piano every night.
- for something temporary:
We are renting an apartment until our house is ready.
He was working in a garage during the vacation.
- for something new:
We have moved from Birmingham. We're living in Manchester now.
He had left university and was working in his father's business.
- to describe something changing or developing:
Everything has been getting more difficult.
He was growing more bad-tempered every day.
- Continuous aspect 1
- Continuous aspect 2
We can use continuous aspect:
- with perfect aspect:
How long have you been sitting there?
I don't know how long she had been learning Spanish.
- with modal verbs:
Your friends will be looking for you.
They might be playing tennis.
- with both modal verbs and perfect aspect:
You should have been driving more carefully.
Soon we will have been living here for 25 years.
- Continuous aspect 3
- Continuous aspect 4
We do not normally use the continuous aspect with stative verbs. We use the simple instead:
I don't understand you. (NOT
am not understanding)
When I got home, I really needed a shower. (NOTwas needing)
I've always liked John. (NOTbeen liking)
Hello IsabelTim_123,
The past continuous and past simple are often used together in this way. The past simple refers to a past finished event (it only takes a short time to hear an announcement) and the past continuous is used to speak about the situation in progress at the time -- English grammars often refer to this as the 'background'.
Without the context, it's not completely clear if the mayor had already resigned or not, but in general I'd understand that she had not resigned yet. If the mayor had already resigned, the speaker would probably have said 'had resigned' or 'resigned'.
Hope this helps.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello LubNko525,
Yes, those are both possible, though whether they'd be better or not depends on the context.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Lucas_xpp,
It's really a question of emphasis. Both forms are possible here.
The simple form (cycled) emphasises the action in its entirety. You might use this if you want to focus on your achievement - how far you cycled.
The continuous form (was cycling) emphasises the activity. You might use this if you want to focus on the duration of the activity, or how demanding it was.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Ahmed Imam,
For something which was a normal activity like this we generally use a simple form:
He went to the club...
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello InmaLD
That is a reduced relative clause. The full form is 'for something that happens before and after another action'. Sometimes we reduce relative clauses such as this one using an '-ing' form.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Montri
In this pair of sentences, 'isn't going to make' is more about the future and 'doesn't' is speaking more in general, i.e. about something that is always true. The first form is explained on Talking about the future and the other one on the Present simple page.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Oliver25,
It is perfectly fine to use either the past progressive or the past simple after 'when', but there is a difference in meaning. The progressive suggests the other action took place during the first (after it started and before it finished), while the simple form suggests the action took place at the same time. For example:
In many contexts, such as some of yours, the distinction is minimal, but I think the principle holds nevertheless.
With regard to your second question, the progressive form implies an incomplete action:
Certain contexts make the distinction all but meaningless, such as your second example, where a time reference (...you were wearing at 7.00) would be needed for the distinction to be clear.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello andreus1999,
The second sentence is not wrong; both forms can be used here.
There is not a great change in meaning in this context but there is a difference in emphasis. The continuous form (won't be making) describes the situation that the person wil be in while doing the job. The simple form (won't make) focuses on the result of doing the job.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hell Abdel El,
The verb in your sentence is correctly formed and describes what Dany is doing right now. I assume that it is correctly used, but of course I can't say that for sure without knowing what the context is and what you want to say.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi skywalker1,
The present continuous can be used to express annoyance. When we use it this way, we often also use the word 'always' -- this is the way it is used in the first sentence you ask about.
In the second sentence, the present continuous is used to speak about a future plan that has already been arranged. For more on this use, please see our Future plans and Talking about the future pages.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Radovan,
I wouldn't say that the distinction is disappearing but there are, as you say, many verbs which can be used as both state verbs and dynamic verbs. The meaning is often different in each use, however. For example, the verb have can be used as a dynamic verb in phrases like I'm having breakfast or We're having a meeting. However, the meaning is not possession here but rather eating and holding, respectively.
Languages are flexible and English is no different. Words become used in new ways and old uses can disappear or change. I think you are quite right to assess the accuracy of claimed rules in the light of how the language is used.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Ulianan,
Both sentences are grammatically possible and so which is correct will depend upon the particular context in which it is used.
The first sentence (will sit) is a prediction about the future from the point of view of the present. The second (will have been sitting) is a description of the situation looking back from a point in the future; it carries the sense of by that time...
You can read more about the second example on this page.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Marua,
For most cases, the past simple form is the best one to use here. The continuous one could be possible in some specific situation, e.g. as the answer to a question regarding why he was there, but in general the simple form is more likely.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Or Yahalom,
In this example Mother will be in the middle of cooking when we get home (remember, 'get' here means the same as 'arrive'). The sequence is this:
1. Mother starts cooking
2. We get home
3. Mother finishes cooking (and we are already at home when this happens).
Best wishes,
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team