Dormir is a verb both in Spanish and French.
French does not have a present progressive. The closest you could get is "etre en train de dormir" and you would conjugate etre (je suis, tu es, il/elle est, nous sommes, vous etes, ils/elles sont).
Spanish does have a present progressive. The form is "estar durmiendo" and you would conjugate estar (yo estoy, tu estas, el/ella/Ud. esta, nosotros estamos, vosotros estais, ellos/ellas/Uds. estan).
Note because the formatting is unable to accommodate accent marks, they are missing.
In present progressive, "dormir" would be "durmiendo," which means "sleeping."
The nosotros form of the verb "dormir" in the present tense is "dormimos," which means "we sleep."
The imperfect progressive tense has two components: the imperfect form of haber and the present participle. Haber is regular in the imperfect tense: había, habías, había, habíamos, habíais, habían The present participle depends on the verb and there are several irregular present participle types (pidiendo for pedir, durmiendo for dormir, etc.) However, because the present participle is the same as the one used in the present progressive, if you know the irregulars from that then there is no need to relearn them here.
The present progressive of "awake" is "awaking" or "awakening."
The present progressive tense of withdraw is:I am withdrawing.You/We/They are withdrawing.He/She/It is withdrawing.
The present progressive tense of "want" is "wanting."
The imperfect progressive tense has two components: the imperfect form of haber and the present participle. Haber is regular in the imperfect tense: había, habías, había, habíamos, habíais, habían The present participle depends on the verb and there are several irregular present participle types (pidiendo for pedir, durmiendo for dormir, etc.) However, because the present participle is the same as the one used in the present progressive, if you know the irregulars from that then there is no need to relearn them here.
The nosotros form of the verb "dormir" in the present tense is "dormimos," which means "we sleep."
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.
present progressive of search
Present progressive.
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.
To form the present progressive tense for "study," you would use the present tense of the verb "to be" (am/are/is) followed by the base form of "study" + ing. For example, "I am studying for my exam."
The present progressive of "awake" is "awaking" or "awakening."
Present progressive, past progressive, and future progressive
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."
The present progressive form of "ring" is "ringing." For example, "I am ringing the doorbell."
The present progressive of "forget" is "is forgetting."