The continuous tense and the progressive tense are the same thing.
To make the continuous future tense you use the following structure: subject + WILL + BE + Verb.
For example, I will be running.
Continuous tense is another term for progressive tense.
"They were talking" is past progressive tense.
The present progressive (continuous) conjugation is: I am holding You are holding He/she/it is holding We/they are holding
Yes, past continuous tense is the same as past progressive tense. It is used to indicate an action that was ongoing or in progress in the past. Both terms refer to the same grammatical concept.
There are actually 6: Present progressive tense Present perfect progressive tense Past progressive tense Past perfect progressive tense Future progressive tense Future perfect progressive tense The progressive tense is also known as the continuous tense.
Continuous tense is another term for progressive tense.
"They were talking" is past progressive tense.
The progressive (continuous) tense describes continuing action.
A verb in a progressive tense shows continuous action.
The present progressive (continuous) conjugation is: I am holding You are holding He/she/it is holding We/they are holding
The past continuous (past progressive) is "was wasting" or "were wasting."
Continuous or progressive tenses use "be" and the "ing" form of a verb. "I / He / She was joining." "You / We / They were joining."
Yes, past continuous tense is the same as past progressive tense. It is used to indicate an action that was ongoing or in progress in the past. Both terms refer to the same grammatical concept.
There are actually 6: Present progressive tense Present perfect progressive tense Past progressive tense Past perfect progressive tense Future progressive tense Future perfect progressive tense The progressive tense is also known as the continuous tense.
was/were sleeping = Past Continuous Tense
The Chinese character 着 (zhe) can have multiple meanings depending on the context. It can indicate the progressive aspect of an action, show continuation of a state, or suggest completion of an action.
The present continuous tense of judge is:I am judging.You/We/They are judging.He/She/It is judging.