Content tagged with "simple"

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Present simple to express past

Headlines

In news headlines, the present simple tense refers to past time:

Present simple with SINCE WHEN

Since when? with the present simple is used to indicate doubt or sarcasm:

State verbs and action verbs

State verbs

State verbs express states or conditions which are relatively static. They include verbs of perception, cognition, the senses, emotion and state of being:

The auxiliaries DO and DOES for emphasis

In the present simple, the auxiliaries do and does (in the third person singular) followed by the bare infinitive form of the main verb can be used in affirmative sentences to express emphasis. In speech, the auxiliary is stressed:

The auxiliary DID for emphasis

In the past simple, the auxiliary did followed by the bare infinitive form of the main verb can be used in affirmative sentences to express emphasis. In speech, the auxiliary is stressed:

The difference between the past simple and the past continuous

Main events and background events in a story

In a story which is told in the past tense, the main events (the ones that happen in the foreground and carry the story forward) are expressed with the past simple, while the past continuous is used for background events:

The difference between the past simple and the past perfect

When the events of a story are told in the order in which they occurred, the past simple tense is used:

The difference between WILL, BE GOING TO and the present continuous for future events

WILL and BE GOING TO for future intentions

Will (future simple) is used to express future intentions that are decided at the time of speaking (spontaneous offers, promises and decisions):

Come on, I'll help you with those bags. (seeing that someone is struggling with their shopping bags)

The forms of the gerund

The gerund is an -ing form. It can be simple or perfect, active or passive:

The forms of the infinitive

An infinitive can be a to-infinitive or a bare infinitive (without to). There is no difference in meaning between them; some structures require a to-infinitive, while others call for a bare infinitive:

I ought to call them. (to-infinitive)
I had better call them. (bare infinitive)

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