English, asked by Brainic5937, 9 months ago

A boy comes towards us he looks like your brother Tim(change to present indefinite and present continue)

Answers

Answered by ranyodhmour892
0

Answer:

How to form the Present Continuous tense

There are three parts to this tense:

1. Subject / Subject pronoun

2. Verb “to be”

3. Verb + ing

Use the verb “to be” as the auxiliary for questions and negatives (NOT do / does).

Here are the ways you can form affirmative, negative and questions in the Present Continuous:

Affirmative sentences

I am working

You are working

He / She / It is working

We are working

They are working

Abbreviated form:

I’m working

You’re working

He’s working / She’s / It’s working

We’re working

They’re working

Negative sentences

I am not / I’m not working

You are not / You aren’t working

He / She / It is not / He / She / It isn’t working

We are not / We aren’t working

They are not / They aren’t working

Questions

Am I working?

Are you working?

Is he / Is she / Is it working?

Are we working?

Are they working?

Short replies

Use the verb “to be” as the auxiliary

Yes I am / No I’m not

Yes you are / No you aren’t

Yes he is / No he isn’t

Yes we are / No we aren’t

Yes they are / No they aren’t

Spelling rules

When the verb ends in a single vowel and consonant, double the consonant before adding -ing:

rub = rubbing

bid = bidding

dig = digging

label = labelling (although in American English you don’t double the ‘l’ = labeling)

spam = spamming

run = running

tap = tapping

sit = sitting

When the verb ends in -e, delete the -e and add -ing:

make = making

write = writing

But if the verb ends -ee, don’t delete the -e:

agree = agreeing

Some verbs that end -ie change to -y + ing

die = dying

tie = tying

lie = lying

When to use the Present Continuous tense

Use this tense to:

– talk about things that are happening now / around now

For example:

“The people next door are shouting.” (At this precise moment)

“Shhh. Tony’s talking on the phone.” (At this precise moment)

“Tom’s working at the supermarket this summer.” (Around now)

“Our football team is doing really well this season.” (Around now)

These things are temporary, rather than permanent. For example, Tom is working at the supermarket only for a few months this summer. It’s probably not his permanent job.

– talk about trends and developments

For example:

“It’s getting more expensive to go to university.”

“People are living longer.”

Answered by shrutisharma4567
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