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Thursday, September 28, 2017

PRESENT CONTINUOUS TENSE | PRESENT PROGRESSIVE | Example



Present progressive is used to express an activity that is happening right now. It is in progress when the speaker is saying about the activity. Here is the example of present progressive.
  a)      I am playing badminton in the field with my friend.
  b)      She is walking to go to the park.
  c)       Benny is calling Dena to ask him out.
  d)      My dog is running to the park.
  e)      Berta and martha are spending their holiday in Lombok.
  f)       My mom and I are cooking fried rice.
  g)      You are yelling at him.
  h)      I am not wearing a brown dress.
  i)        That store is not selling novels.
  j)        Pica’s not reading a poetry. 
  k)      Are they chasing that a handsome boy?
  l)        Is she going to her new apartment?
  m)    Am I getting a new mail?
Based on the examples above, there are some formula to understand those sentences.
After subject, the sentences should use to be and Verb 1 ing to express it.          
I -> am
They, we, you -> are
She, He, it -> is
Formula:
S + tobe (is, am, are) + V1 ing
Wildan is driving his car right now.
Wildan is He, tobe used is
Verb 1 is drove + ing = driving

S + tobe (is, am, are) + not + V1 ing
  a)      I am not wearing a brown dress.
  b)      Dendra is not smoking.
  c)       They are not studying Physics.

Tobe (is, am, are) + S + V1 ing
  a)      Are they chasing that a handsome boy?
  b)      Is she going to her new apartment?
  c)       Am I getting a new mail?
Note :
S : subjet
V1 ing : Verb 1 +ing, e.g. driving, walking, trying, handling, etc.

Hope you enjoy my explanations.
Dari penjelasan di atas, ada beberapa verb yang tidak bisa di “ing” kan (nonpregressive verb). Contohnya like, tidak bisa menjadi liking.
Untuk penjelasan lenih lanjut, silahkan tanya kepada author. Please feel free to ask, thanks a bunch.


Source
Azar, B. S. 1992. Fundamentals of English Grammar-2nd edition. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Murphy, R. 1994. English Grammar in Use-2nd ed. UK: Cambridge University Press.

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