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Hady
The difference between future progressive and present continuous What is the difference between the following two sentences? 

I will be meeting John on Monday evening. I am meeting John on Monday evening.
31 aug. 2018 17:03
Opmerkingen · 4
3

To the native English speaker, there really isn't a huge difference. They have the same meaning and same implications.


In your example, the present continuous is considered a future plan with arrangements (Monday evening). For future progressive, it's a fixed future event. Those are just fancy ways of saying that you have a plan to meet John on Monday evening.


The smallest difference to me is that "I will be meeting John" sounds like you don't see John very often, whereas "I am meeting John" sounds like it's something you do frequently. This might just be my perception, but that's how I interpret it as a native speaker.


Hope this helps!

31 augustus 2018
1
Thank you so much, Stephanie. I was asked about this and I couldn't really tell the difference. They both seemed to mean the same exact thing to me. Thanks for your elaboration. I will quote your words and share them with my friend. 
Thanks a lot, Alice, for your comment. Since they both have the same meaning, it is really hard to actually explain the difference between them. 
31 augustus 2018

There is no difference in meaning.  You can use the present progressive to mean the future.

We are going to the zoo tomorrow is actually more common than We will (We'll) be going to the zoo tomorrow.


31 augustus 2018
Stephanie thank you for answering this. I was about to answer...but my answer... only took up one sentence. I didn't feel like my answer would explain it well at all.   
31 augustus 2018

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