Angela
I don’t know why I still don’t understand when I can use Presen/Past continuous, even if I know the rules of using I still can’t use it correctly in my speech.. I think it is because I don’t understand it properly. Recently I realized that finally I understood how to use “I have been V+ing” this tense and it makes me happy 😊 maybe sometimes I can make mistakes with this tense but I know it and the exact word is I “feel” it. But I am still struggling with Continuous tense( maybe in this case I use it correctly 😅) Can you give me some advice?
17 ธ.ค. 2024 เวลา 6:53
คำตอบ · 9
2
I think it's more or less like the imperfective in Russian, but rather than needing to remember two different verbs for the perfective/imperfective forms, you only need 'was' (if it was in the past) and to add the -ing to the verb, generally. It's continuous, so it emphasizes the continuous nature of the process/action. I ran. - Completed, one time action. Describing the action of running that was completed. Я побежал. I was running. - Past continuous, 'I was in the process of running.' Я бежал. 'I was doing my homework.' Я делал домашнее задание. 'I did my homework.' Я сделал домашнее задание. 'I was going home.' Я шёл домой. 'I went home.' Я пошёл домой. But it doesn't necessarily have to do with it being a repeated or habitual action--it describes a particular instance. If it's habitual, like the simple present-- 'I run,' or 'I drink coffee,' this is more a description about yourself and what kind of activities describe you. You regularly engage in running or drinking coffee. 'I am a coffee drinking person' = 'I drink coffee.' 'I am a runner = I run.' Hopefully, that makes sense, or at least that's how I tend to relate to perfective/imperfective when studying Russian.
17 ธันวาคม 2024
2
There are no continuous "tenses". It is natural that you be confused because these misnamed "tenses" confuse every learner of English. Consider the "Present Continuous" sentence: "Billy is riding a bicycle." "Riding" is not an active verb in this sentence. It has an object but no subject. The only verb is "is". "Riding" is a participle acting as an adjective. It is not an ordinary adjective (like "happy"), but a participle acting as an adjective. As such, it has some verbal characteristics (like having an object) without being an active verb (because it has no subject). "Riding" describes Billy, but Billy does not *act* through "riding" the way a subject would normally act through a verb. Rather, the linking verb "is" connects Billy with this adjective just "Billy" and "happy" are connected in the sentence "Billy is happy." One thing that might help to convince you that "riding" is an adjective (and not a verb) is that it *behaves* like one. An adjective clings to the nearest noun, and a participle does the same. Consider these sentences: 1) Riding a bicycle, Billy saw a cat. 2) Billy, riding a bicycle, saw a cat. 3) Billy saw a cat riding a bicycle. In #1 and #2, the adjective phrase ("riding a bicycle") describes Billy because Billy is the nearest noun. However, in #3 it is the cat who rides the bicycle because "cat" is the nearest noun. To help yourself learn to use participles correctly, write more sentences in the style of these three examples, and fewer sentences in the form "Billy is riding a bicycle" (Present Continuous) Once you have a better understanding of what participles really are, you can resume your use of the Present Continuous Word Pattern, and this "tense" will no longer confuse you.
17 ธันวาคม 2024
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