ابحث بين معلمي الإنجليزية المتعددين...
Danyel
I'm being angry...
I'm being angry.
&
I'm angry.
What is the difference?
٣ يناير ٢٠١٨ ١٣:١٤
الإجابات · 3
2
If you want to describe an emotion in the present tense we use feeling + emotion/mood rather than the continuous form (to be + ing)
We don't usually use continuous forms with emotions/moods and state verbs:
State verbs are those that describe something that stays the same: For example
I am English - (this never changes)
I am happy (this is my emotion now, or in general - I am a happy person)
I am speaking English (at the moment)
I am feeling happy (at the moment - but I might not be happy tomorrow)
Hope that helps
Helen
٣ يناير ٢٠١٨
1
"I'm angry" is better. You would not really use the first one in normal conversation. :-)
٣ يناير ٢٠١٨
There really isn't a difference. Both are expressing anger in the present tense. In my opinion you would tend to say "I'm angry" as "I'm being angry" would sound a tiny bit unusual in most situations.
٣ يناير ٢٠١٨
لم تجد إجاباتك بعد؟
اكتب اسألتك ودع الناطقين الأصليين باللغات يساعدونك!
Danyel
المهارات اللغوية
البيلاروسية, الإنجليزية, الفرنسية, البولندية, الروسية, الأوكرانية
لغة التعلّم
الإنجليزية, البولندية
مقالات قد تعجبك أيضًا

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
9 تأييدات · 8 التعليقات

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
31 تأييدات · 8 التعليقات

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 تأييدات · 12 التعليقات
مقالات أكثر
