Present simple: I/You/We/They lead. He/She/It leads. The present participle is leading.
Present continuous: I am leading. You/We/they are leading. He/She/It is leading.
Present simple: lead/leads Present continuous: am/is/are leading
There are 12 main tenses in English: simple present, present continuous, present perfect, present perfect continuous, simple past, past continuous, past perfect, past perfect continuous, simple future, future continuous, future perfect, and future perfect continuous.
Sure! Simply change the simple present form of the verb to "was/were" + present participle. For example, "I eat" (simple present) changes to "I was eating" (past continuous).
The six tenses of "do" are: Present simple: I do Past simple: I did Future simple: I will do Present continuous: I am doing Past continuous: I was doing Future continuous: I will be doing
There is only one tense in the present tense, but within that tense, there are four aspects that includes simple present, present continuous, present perfect, and present perfect continuous.
"Have" can be in various verb tenses based on the context, such as present simple (have), present continuous (having), past simple (had), past continuous (was/were having), present perfect (have had), and past perfect (had had).
The 14 English verb tenses are, present simple, present continuous, past simple, past continuous, present perfect, present perfect continuous, past perfect, past perfect continuous, future simple, future continuous, future perfect, future perfect continuous, conditional continuous, and conditional perfect.
Technically, two (present and past) but commonly, we say there are 12: past simple present simple future simple past continuous present continuous future continuous past perfect present perfect future perfect past perfect continuous present perfect continuous future perfect continuous
The English language has 2 Aspects: the Simple and the Continuous or Progressive one. This means that every tense has tow forms, one Simple and one Continuous. For example, the Simple Present (the Present Simple) of the verb "to stay" is: I stay, you stay, he stays, she stays, it stays, we stay, you stay, they say, whereas the Continuous Present (or the Present Continuous) is: I am staying, you are staying, he is staying, .... they are staying. The Simple Past (the Past Tense): I stayed (I was staying = the Past Continuous); the Simple Future: I will/shall stay (The Future Continuous = I will/shall be staying); the Simple Present Perfect = We have stayed (the Present Perfect Continuous = We have been staying); the Simple Past Perfect = They had stayed (the Past Perfect Continuous = They had been staying).
Present simple -- I live in Ekatahuna Present continuous -- I am living in Ekatahuna Present perfect -- I have lived in Ekatahuna Present perfect continuous -- I have been living in Ekatahuna Present simple passive -- The butter is kept in the fridge. Present continuous passive -- The butter is being kept in the fridge. Present perfect passive -- The butter has been kept in the fridge.
The present tense of "to bother" is "bothers." For example, "He bothers me with his constant questions."
The simple present tense is:I/You/We/They play.He/She/It plays.-----"was playing" is a Past Continuous; the equivalent Present Continuous is "is playing".
The present tense is a verb form that shows action currently happening or a state of being. It is used to describe things that are always true, routines, or actions happening right now. In English, present tense verbs typically end in -s for third person singular subjects, like "he eats."
There is only one tense in the present tense, but within that tense, there are four aspects that includes simple present, present continuous, present perfect, and present perfect continuous.
The general present tense is "Recall". Simple present is "Recalls". Present continuous tense is "Am/is/are recalling". Present perfect tense is "has/have recalled" and present perfect continuous tense is "Has/have been recalling". The general past tense is "recalled". Simple past - "Recalled". Past continuous- "Was recalling/ were recalling". Past perfect - "Had recalled". Past perfect continuous- "Had been recalling".
The present continuous tense is used to describe actions that are currently happening at the moment of speaking. It is formed by combining the verb "to be" in the present tense with the present participle form of the main verb (ending in -ing). For example, "I am eating" describes an action that is happening right now.
"Am flying" is the present continuous tense.The simple present tense is:I/You/We/They fly.He/She/It flies.
A tense is a way of referring to a time (past, present or future) in language. Eg. if you say 'I have walked half a mile today', you are using the past tense because you have finished walking at the moment of speaking. Within each tense, there is a further subdivision: simple and continuous. If you want to stress the duration of the action of which you speak (the fact that it is/was/will be going on), you use the continuous. Here are some examples of every tense and its variations: present simple: I walk present continuous: I am walking present perfect simple: I have walked present perfect continuous: I have been walking past simple: I walked past continuous: I was walking past perfect simple: I had walked past perfect continuous: I had been walking future simple: I will walk future continuous: I will be walking future perfect: I will have walked future perfect continuous: I will have been walking