Present tenses
Present simple
Structure of present simple | ||
positive | negative | question |
I work in a bank.
You work in a bank. We work in a bank. They work in a bank. |
I don't (do not) work.
You don't (do not) work. We don't (do not) work. They don't (do not) work. |
Do I work in a bank?
Do you work in a bank? Do we work in a bank? Do they work in a bank? |
He works in a bank.
She works in a bank. The bank opens at 9 o'clock. |
He doesn't (does not) work.
She doesn't (does not) work. It doesn't (does not) open at 9 o'clock. |
Does he work?
Does she work? Does it open at 9 o'clock? |
Present simple – common mistakes | ||
Common mistakes | Correct version | Why? |
I working in London. | I work in London. | The gerund ing form is not used in the present simple. |
He work in London. | He works in London. | The third person he , she , it adds the letter s . |
He work in London? | Does he work in London? |
Questions - third person:
does + subject + infinitive. All other persons: do + subject + infinitive. |
Work he in London? | Does he work in London? | |
He not work in London. |
He doesn't work in London. |
Negatives - third person:
subject + doesn't + infinitive. All other persons: subject + don't + infinitive. |
Present continuous
Structure of present continuous | ||
positive | negative | question |
I'm (I am) reading a book.
You're (you are) reading. We're (we are) reading. They're (they are) reading. |
I'm (I am) not reading.
You're (you are) not reading. We're (we are) not reading. They're (they are) not reading. |
Am I reading?
Are you reading? Are we reading? Are they reading? |
He's (he is) reading a book.
She's (she is) reading a book. It's (it is) raining. |
He's not / he isn't (he is not) reading.
She's not / she isn't (she is not) reading. It's not / it isn't (it is not) raining. |
Is he reading?
Is she reading? Is it raining? |
Present continuous – common mistakes | ||
Common mistakes | Correct version | Why? |
They still waiting for you. | They are still waiting for you. | to form a continuous tense we use be + -ing. |
They are still waiting for you? | Are they still waiting for you? | In questions the subject ( they ) and the auxiliary verb ( be ) change places. |
Do they still waiting for you? | Are they still waiting for you? | |
Where they are waiting for you? | Where are they waiting for you? | |
She doesn't watching TV. | She isn't watching TV. | To form the negative we put not after the verb be (am not, is not = isn't, are not = aren't). |
I'm believing you. | I believe you. | Some verbs are not used in continuous tenses - these are called stative verbs (e.g. believe, come from, cost, depend, exist, feel, hate, like ). |