I'm reading a book. She is writing an email. They are watching a movie. He is cooking dinner. I am listening to music. We are playing soccer. You are studying for an exam. The dog is sleeping on the couch. The baby is crawling on the floor. The birds are chirping outside. The sun is shining brightly. The students are working on their assignments. The cat is drinking milk. The car is parked in the driveway. The flowers are blooming in the garden. The clock is ticking loudly. The rain is falling gently. The children are playing in the park. The workers are fixing the roof. The computer is updating software. The storm is approaching from the west.
To change the sentence "Does she no walk gracefully" into the present continuous tense, you would say "Is she not walking gracefully." In this transformation, the auxiliary verb "does" changes to "is" to indicate the present continuous tense. The main verb "walk" changes to "walking" to show the ongoing action in the present. Additionally, the negative "no" changes to "not" in the present continuous form.
Hiding is a present participle by its self it has no tense. Combined with other verbs it can be: present continuous - is hiding / are hiding past continuous - was hiding / were hiding present perfect continuous - have been hiding past perfect continuous - had been hiding
The present continuous tense is used to talk about both actions that are happening now and actions in the future.The present continuous tense follows this structure:Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Be" (am, are, is) + Present Participle.Thus:I am dancing.You/We/They are dancing.He/She/It is dancing.Examples:I am doing my homework (action happening now)I am taking my finals next month (action in the future)
All continuous tenses show an ongoing action.The past continuous is formed with was/were + present participle (I'll use "walking for my examples):I was walkingWe were walkingYou were walkingHe/she was walkingThey were walkingThe present continuous is formed with am/is/are + present participle:I am walkingWe are walkingYou are walkingHe/she is walkingThey are walkingThe future continuous is formed with will + be + present participle:I will be walkingWe will be walkingYou will be walkingHe/she will be walkingThey will be walkingPresent participles are the -ing form of a verb.
Walking is a present participle. Present participles can be used to create the progressive (continuous) tenses. They rely on auxiliary verbs to show the tense. Examples: Am/Is/Are walking (present progressive) Was/Were walking (past progressive) Will be walking (future progressive)
The present continuous tense is used to show something that happen in the past and continued up until to the present now.
To change the sentence "Does she no walk gracefully" into the present continuous tense, you would say "Is she not walking gracefully." In this transformation, the auxiliary verb "does" changes to "is" to indicate the present continuous tense. The main verb "walk" changes to "walking" to show the ongoing action in the present. Additionally, the negative "no" changes to "not" in the present continuous form.
Hiding is a present participle by its self it has no tense. Combined with other verbs it can be: present continuous - is hiding / are hiding past continuous - was hiding / were hiding present perfect continuous - have been hiding past perfect continuous - had been hiding
Team is not a verb so it doesn't show tense, it is a noun.
Not necessarily, but occasionally. For example, the sentences "They sometimes like to listen to the latest music" is present continuous, while the sentence "They sometimes liked to listen to the latest music" is past tense. So the word sometime does not show which tense it is and can be used in different tenses.
The present continuous tense is used to talk about both actions that are happening now and actions in the future.The present continuous tense follows this structure:Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Be" (am, are, is) + Present Participle.Thus:I am dancing.You/We/They are dancing.He/She/It is dancing.Examples:I am doing my homework (action happening now)I am taking my finals next month (action in the future)
All continuous tenses show an ongoing action.The past continuous is formed with was/were + present participle (I'll use "walking for my examples):I was walkingWe were walkingYou were walkingHe/she was walkingThey were walkingThe present continuous is formed with am/is/are + present participle:I am walkingWe are walkingYou are walkingHe/she is walkingThey are walkingThe future continuous is formed with will + be + present participle:I will be walkingWe will be walkingYou will be walkingHe/she will be walkingThey will be walkingPresent participles are the -ing form of a verb.
Walking is a present participle. Present participles can be used to create the progressive (continuous) tenses. They rely on auxiliary verbs to show the tense. Examples: Am/Is/Are walking (present progressive) Was/Were walking (past progressive) Will be walking (future progressive)
Eating is a present participle, which can be used as a gerund, an adjective, or a verb. When present participles are used as verbs, they create the progressive (continuous) forms and require the use of an auxiliary verb to show tense. Am/is/are eatingis the present progressive tense. The past progressive tense is was/were eating.
Men is the plural form of man. Man/men are nouns and nouns don't show tense. Look at these sentences: The men eat rice everyday. -- present tense The men ate rice yesterday. -- past tense The men will eat rice tomorrow - future tense Notice how the word man doesn't change it is the same in the present tense and the past tense, that's because man/men doesn't show tense.
Your question is not clear. The tense for the word 'writing' ? The word writing, if it is a verb, is called the present participle. To be past or present it must be with a word like am/is/are or was/were. was writing - past continuous is writing = present continuous But writing can also be a noun and nouns don't show tenses: His writing is very good.
to show - shows - showed - shown (archaic: shewed - shewn) The present tense is: I/you/we/they show He/she/it shows