Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Danyel
I'm being angry... I'm being angry. & I'm angry. What is the difference?
3 janv. 2018 13:14
Réponses · 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
3 janvier 2018
1
"I'm angry" is better. You would not really use the first one in normal conversation. :-)
3 janvier 2018
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.
3 janvier 2018
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