[Grammar] Confused about English Tenses

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leslieking

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I have two statements:

1. He is drinking.
2. She is cold.

I'm sure the first statement is the Present Continous tense.

He - Subject
is - The verb be in the present tense
drink + ing = The main verb + ing

But I'm not sure about the second statement. What tense is the second statement? Is it Present Continous too? I ask it, because the second statement doesn't contain the word "ing" after the verb. But as far as I know the Simple Present do not use the verb be at all. I suppose it's a kind of Present Continous. Isn't it?

I'm learning English and would love to understand the difference between the two.



 

5jj

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She is cold.

Is
is the present simple of the verb BE.
Don't forget that BE is a verb in its own right - it's not just an auxiliary verb
 
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MikeNewYork

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I have two statements:

1. He is drinking.
2. She is cold.

I'm sure the first statement is the Present Continous tense.

He - Subject
is - The verb be in the present tense
drink + ing = The main verb + ing

But I'm not sure about the second statement. What tense is the second statement? Is it Present Continous too? I ask it, because the second statement doesn't contain the word "ing" after the verb. But as far as I know the Simple Present do not use the verb be at all. I suppose it's a kind of Present Continous. Isn't it?

I'm learning English and would love to understand the difference between the two.

The second sentence is: subject (pronoun, she) - linking verb (is) - cold (predicate adjective, modifying the subject).
 

leslieking

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The second sentence is: subject (pronoun, she) - linking verb (is) - cold (predicate adjective, modifying the subject).
So, the word "drinking" is a verb and "cold" is an adjective?
 

MikeNewYork

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So, the word "drinking" is a verb and "cold" is an adjective?

The word "drinking" is the present participle of a verb (drink) and is part of the present continuous form of the main verb (is drinking).
 

5jj

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So, the word "drinking" is a verb
'Drinking' is the -ing form (present participle) of the verb DRINK. When combined with the present simple of the verb BE, it forms the present progressive/continuous aspect of the verb DRINK.
 

leslieking

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Thanks. Yes, I understand that "drink" is a verb, but what about "cold"? Is "cold" an adjective? I suppose adjectives can't be suffixed with -ing.
 

leslieking

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Am I right?

She is drinking. <- Present continuous tense
She is cold. <- Present tense
She drinks. <- Simple present

Is the Simple Present without the verb "be"?
 

MikeNewYork

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Thanks. Yes, I understand that "drink" is a verb, but what about "cold"? Is "cold" an adjective? I suppose adjectives can't be suffixed with -ing.

Yes, "cold" is an adjective. Some -ing words (present participles of verbs) can be used as adjectives.

slithering snake
barking dog
loving child
 

MikeNewYork

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Am I right?

She is drinking. <- Present continuous tense
She is cold. <- Present tense
She drinks. <- Simple present

Is the Simple Present without the verb "be"?

Yes, your third sentence is the simple present (without the verb "to be").
 

leslieking

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What distinction are you making here?
Well the second statement doesn't have the verb BE. So, I suppose that's why we say Simple Present. But the one that have "is" is just Present tense. Or am I wrong?
 
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5jj

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She is naughty. Present simple.
She is being naughty.
Present progressive/continuous.
 

GeorginaWitcombe

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Well the second statement doesn't have the verb BE. So, I suppose that's why we say Simple Present. But the one that have "is" is just Present tense. Or am I wrong?
They both are Present Simple. In the first one the verb is ''is'' or ''to be''. In the second one is ''drinks''. ''To be'' is a verb that usually has some adjective after itself.
 

leslieking

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They both are Present Simple. In the first one the verb is ''is'' or ''to be''. In the second one is ''drinks''. ''To be'' is a verb that usually has some adjective after itself.
But why the second statement doesn't have the verb be "is" ?
 

MikeNewYork

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But why the second statement doesn't have the verb be "is" ?

Both statements have one verb in the present tense, so they are both in the simple present.
 

Tdol

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Well the second statement doesn't have the verb BE. So, I suppose that's why we say Simple Present. But the one that have "is" is just Present tense. Or am I wrong?

BE:
He is being silly. (Present progressive/continuous)
He is French. (Present simple)

DRINK:
She is drinking a cup of coffee. (Present progressive/continuous)
She drinks wine most evenings. (Present simple)
 

Raymott

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Originally Posted by zoltankr

She is cold. <- Present tense
She drinks. <- Simple present

What distinction are you making here?
The present simple tense = the simple present tense = the present tense = the (simple) present indicative (tense).
You are making no distinction by using two equivalent terms.
 
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