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#2 (permalink) Mon Jul 26, 2004 10:24 am Present Simple vs Present Continuous |
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Hi Elsa, An interesting question, which I will try and answer. It's really a difference between «state» and «action».
If you take the two verbs see and hear — they both describe states or situations which are the same all the time.
If you have eyes, you can see. If you have ears, you can hear. In both cases it's not usually necessary to use the continuous form because the two verbs describe a continuous state anyhow.
The verbs «look» and «listen» on the other hand can describe an action and can therefore be used in the continuous form.
You can see the sky because you have eyes but possibly you are not looking at the clouds.
You can hear a noise because you have ears but you are not listening (an action) to the sound of the birds.
The verb «taste» can have a passive (describing a state) and an active meaning also.
The food tastes good to you because you are using your sense of taste in the same way as the sense of hearing or seeing (the senses are there all the time) but if you are tasting some particular food it means you are actively trying to find out the taste/flavour of something.
Your last point about have or having is slightly different. Have here is used (as it is used to mean so many different things) to mean eat.
And here it is the difference between the Present Simple for habitual descriptions and Present Continuous for actual descriptions.
So I have (eat) my dinner at 8 every evening but I am having (eating) my dinner now and can't talk to you. Hope this helps Alan _________________ English as a Second Language You can read my ESL story Present Simple |
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Alan Co-founder

Joined: 27 Sep 2003 Posts: 13887 Location: UK
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#3 (permalink) Tue Jul 27, 2004 5:07 am Very clear |
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| Of course it helps! Your explanation is very clear and useful. Though I'm sure I'm going to have another doubt about this topic very soon. :wink: Thank you for your time! |
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Elsa New Member
Joined: 02 Mar 2004 Posts: 8
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#4 (permalink) Tue Oct 19, 2010 4:41 am I'm hearing music at this moment vs I'm seeing a picture now |
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Anyone can help? Which is correct
Ask the teacher what the lesson is or ask the teacher what is the lesson
Thank you |
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Merlack I'm new here and I like it ;-)
Joined: 12 Aug 2010 Posts: 10
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#5 (permalink) Tue Oct 19, 2010 7:23 am I'm hearing music at this moment vs I'm seeing a picture now |
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You mean "Can anyone help?"
Mister Micawber has answered your question in another topic. Please don't post the same question in multiple threads unless some time has passed and it is obvious that the first question was overlooked.
In fact, you can avoid questions being overlooked by starting a new topic unless the question is relevant to something that has been said before. _________________ Cheers m' dears! |
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Beeesneees Language Coach

Joined: 08 Apr 2010 Posts: 18741 Location: UK, born and bred
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| interesting English saying | Comparisons |