Edward Malone
Look for Why does everybody speaks "Look for"? There is "seek". What is a difference? And why is "looking for" in the Present simple?
27 mars 2015 08:29
Réponses · 2
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"Seek" is not used very much by native English speakers: they prefer the phrase "look for." There is no good reason for this, it is just how things developed over the years. "Looking for" is in the present continuous tense (e.g., "I'm looking for a new apartment"). The present simple version is "look for" (e.g., "He often looks for car parts on the internet").
27 mars 2015
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