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Whats the different between "will stay at.." and "will be staying at..."?
when should i use "i will be staying there more than a year." and when to say "i will stay there more than a year."? thanks.
Oct 13, 2014 5:08 PM
Answers · 3
2
While they do mean the same thing, the notion of perceiving time is perhaps slightly different.
"I will stay there for more than a year" looks at your year of staying there as a single block of time, and the moments within that year are somehow not considered as important.
"I will be staying there for more than a year" emphasizes the moments that make up the year of staying there. It's the same block of time, but perceived a bit differently. You're thinking more about all of the days and months that make up that year.
October 13, 2014
I agree with Alan. The use of the continuous tense nearly always puts the emphasis on the experience or the activity itself.
October 13, 2014
It means the same thing :)
October 13, 2014
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Chinese (Mandarin), Chinese (Taiwanese), English, French, Spanish
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