Oh! My stuff is keeping disappearing.

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it-is-niaz

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What is the difference between the following?

Oh! My stuff is keeping disappearing.
Oh! My stuff keeps disappearing.
 
The first is wrong.
 
The second is possible.
 
The verb "keep" in the sense of continue to do something is not used in the progressive tense as it is considered a stative verb. Do you know what those are?
 
Do you know what those are?
Yes I do. I just watched some videos in YouTube regarding stative verbs. Thanks for the explanations.
 
The verb "keep" in the sense of continue to do something is not used in the progressive tense as it is considered a stative verb.

Interestingly, the progressive does work with continue; but if the replacement were made, the gerund complement would need to be replaced by an infinitive:

My stuff is continuing to disappear.
 
It will stop disappearing when it's all gone.
:lol:
 
Interestingly, the progressive does work with continue; but if the replacement were made, the gerund complement would need to be replaced by an infinitive:

My stuff is continuing to disappear.

Yes. This partly explains why I don't believe that keep in My stuff keeps disappearing can be considered a stative verb.
 
Yes. This partly explains why I don't believe that keep in My stuff keeps disappearing can be considered a stative verb.

What do you suppose it is? :)
 
What do you suppose it is? :)

I guess one could read it as stative, as: My stuff is in a state of continual disappearing, but I feel that it better belongs in another class, though I can't yet suggest which one, or give a convincing reason why. I'm working on it, though ... :)

Do you see it as stative? Could you explain why so? Do you know of any tests for stativity?
 
I sometimes get the feeling that we claim that a verb is stative because it is not used in the the progressive; it is not used in the progressive because it is stative.

It's certainly not a solid state verb in this case.
 
And to complicate matters further, consider the use of "keep" in the sense of maintain:

The money is keeping him quiet for now.
He's keeping things under wraps.

To me, "keep" is still stative in the above examples; I mean it's hardly an action verb. And yet, it works with the progressive.

Conclusion: There are no hard-and-fast rules about how we designate a verb as stative, nor about whether stative verbs can work in a progressive structure.
 
Conclusion: There are no hard-and-fast rules about how we designate a verb as stative

For me, it's quite simple: if the verb signifies a state, then the verb can be said to be stative. What can be a matter of disagreement is what counts as a state.

The trouble I have with this example is that it seems to be about a repeated action (keeps disappearing), and so does not qualify as signifying a state in the normal sense of the word. Part of the sense of the concept of 'state' is that there is no action, no change.
 
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