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Yulia
"Hope" or "Be hoping" (verb)
We always use "hope" in present simple, not continuous. It's a state verb. But in American films I can often hear "I am hoping", "We are hoping." I don't understand. Could you please explain me why people use it in this way. Is it right or is it just a slang?
11 août 2017 06:15
Réponses · 5
2
You're correct about the rule, however we can't say that a verb is always stative, because it depends on the exact meaning. In your example, the speaker wants to emphasize that he is *actively* hoping, almost like praying, or that his hope is influencing his actions. Another verb used this way is "to like." If we say "I'm liking this," it means that I'm actively enjoying this. And then, there's the Scorpions' hit single "Still Loving You" -- but that's perhaps more an example of poetic license.
11 août 2017
1
It's not only in films that we use this. It's the present continuous or what we in America also call the present participle. All of these are 'state' verbs or 'state of being' verbs:
I am thinking...
I am hoping...
I am longing...
I am eating...
etc.
And past continuous:
I was hoping...
I was eating...
etc
State of being verbs are extremely common in English. It's not slang. It's just a standard part of English.
12 août 2017
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Yulia
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Japonais (okinawaïen), Russe
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Japonais (okinawaïen)
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