Want this question answered?
No, the present tense and progressive tense are different. The present tense expresses action happening in the current moment (e.g. "I walk to school"), while the progressive tense shows ongoing or continuous action (e.g. "I am walking to school").
Past tense: He cooked dinner last night. Present tense: He cooks dinner every evening. Past participle: He has cooked dinner for us many times. Future tense: He will cook dinner for us tomorrow.
will talk / going to talk. I will talk to the students this afternoon. The teacher is going to talk to us a bout the exams.
The verb tense tells us the time when the action of the verb occurs - whether it is happening in the past, present, or future. This helps provide clarity and context to the statement being made.
will tell -- I will tell your mother you said that be + going to tell -- The teacher is going to tell us the results tomorrow be + telling -- The headmaster is telling us his life story next week
present continuous/progressive is formed with - be verb + present participle ie.am / is / are talking.I am talking to him later.She is talking to him now.They are talking to us at 7:30 to night.
The future tense of the verb 'take' is 'to take'or 'will take', 'shall take', 'might take' and so on..For example:We'd like to take dinner with the family. (future tense).We will take them to dinner tonight at Michael's restaurant. (future tense).Michael suggested we take seats near his wine room. (present tense).I thought of taking the seared prawns and fontina risotto. (noun, present tense).Our daughter is very taken with the chocolate and candied orange tart. (adjective, present tense).She has taken an evening off in order to join us. (past tense).Our son took the oysters in bloody Mary jelly at the bar before we arrived. (past tense).Michael urged us to take some Malaga white muscat with him later. (future tense).I bet we'll end up with the Louis XIII and those Cohiba cigars. I will take tomorrow off work. (future relaxed tense).
The future tense of the verb 'take' is 'to take'or 'will take', 'shall take', 'might take' and so on..For example:We'd like to take dinner with the family. (future tense).We will take them to dinner tonight at Michael's restaurant. (future tense).Michael suggested we take seats near his wine room. (present tense).I thought of taking the seared prawns and fontina risotto. (noun, present tense).Our daughter is very taken with the chocolate and candied orange tart. (adjective, present tense).She has taken an evening off in order to join us. (past tense).Our son took the oysters in bloody Mary jelly at the bar before we arrived. (past tense).Michael urged us to take some Malaga white muscat with him later. (future tense).I bet we'll end up with the Louis XIII and those Cohiba cigars. I will take tomorrow off work. (future relaxed tense).
to be more prepared and protect your home and things
To prepare you for the future when it's all about us.
will talk / going to talk. I will talk to the students this afternoon. The teacher is going to talk to us a bout the exams.
No, the present tense and progressive tense are different. The present tense expresses action happening in the current moment (e.g. "I walk to school"), while the progressive tense shows ongoing or continuous action (e.g. "I am walking to school").
It helps us study the past, so we might predict the future, although I don't know why we want to do that, maybe to prepare for it?
UK is more progressive.
'Will you go with us to the softball game?' refers to a future action.
will aid - We will aid them to get a new car. going to aid - They are going to aid us to get a new car. ( I think this is not commonly used) be verb + aiding - They are aiding us in our work.
A past tense verbs shows us that an action eg walk, run, eat, happened in the past.For example:I walk to school most days. - in this sentence the verb walk is present tense.I walked to school yesterday. - in this sentence the verb walked is in past tense. This shows us that the action walk happened sometime in the past. The time word yesterday shows us when this action happened in the past.All verbs have a past tense form. Some examples:walk - walkedrun - raneat - atecatch - caughthear - heard