past ordinary form
Yes, "You were speaking" is an example of the past progressive tense, which indicates an ongoing action that was happening in the past. The present progressive tense would be "You are speaking."
Present progressive/continuous is formed with - am/is/are + present participle.I am watching youHe is watching youThey are watching you.
The present progressive tense ends in ING.For example, I am walking, I am talking etc. answer
There are three main types of verb tenses: past, present, and future. The past tense refers to actions that have already happened, the present tense refers to actions happening now, and the future tense refers to actions that will happen. Each tense helps to indicate when an action took place or will take place in relation to the present moment.
Verbs typically used with present participles include "be," "keep," "enjoy," "avoid," "resist," "continue," "consider," "finish," "begin," "start," and "forget." These verbs are used to show simultaneous or ongoing actions, states, or habits.
Perfect progressive tense is a verb form that indicates an action that started in the past, continued up to a point in the past, and may continue into the future. It is formed by combining the present perfect tense with the progressive aspect. For example: "I have been studying for three hours."
present progressive of search
Present progressive.
No, it is a verb. Example, I sit. To make it present progressive, I am sitting.
The past simple tense is meant.(pronounced ment)The present perfect tense is have/hasmeant, and the past perfect tense is had meant.The past progressive tense is was meaning / were meaning.The past perfect progressive is had been meaning.
Technically, any single conjugation of the verb in the present tense can also be understood as the present progressive. However, to remove all equivocation, the present progressive of caminar is composed of an appropriate present tense conjugation of the Spanish verb to be - estar - plus the present participle of caminar: caminando. Example: Estoy caminando - I am walking.
Present: show, Past: showed, Future: will show, Present Continuous: is showing, Present Perfect: has shown, Present Perfect Continuous: has been showing, Past Continuous: was showing, Past Perfect: had shown, Past Perfect Continuous: had been showing, Future Continuous: will be showing, Future Perfect: will have shown, Future Perfect Continuous: will have been showing.