bruxinha
Junior Member
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2020
- Member Type
- English Teacher
- Native Language
- Portuguese
- Home Country
- Portugal
- Current Location
- Germany
Hello,
I have a question about an exercise from a test. The test was written by me and another teacher at my school, and we are a bit unsure about an answer. The student who wrote that answer is a near native-speaker, being raised bilingually in Germany.
Here's the complete exercise, for the context.
In Pryanga's second sentence, the required answer is "I am having a shower right now!". The present progressive fits, since she's talking about what she is doing at this exact moment. It's not a future action nor something she will do in a few minutes or even hours. She's already doing it ("right now").
The student used a future form and wrote "I'm going to have a shower right now!" Does it sound natural, would this be preferable to the original answer?
Would this mean that she's on her way to the shower (as in "I'm going to have a shower now."), or does the expression "right now" imply that she's already under the shower, hence the present progressive? My humble opinion (more an intuition) makes me prefer the present progressive version, but I'm not a native speaker.
I have a question about an exercise from a test. The test was written by me and another teacher at my school, and we are a bit unsure about an answer. The student who wrote that answer is a near native-speaker, being raised bilingually in Germany.
Here's the complete exercise, for the context.
It's Pryanga's birthday. Complete the questions and answers with the correct form of the verbs in brackets. Use the simple present or the present progressive. Pay attention to the signal words! There is one example.
Pryanga’s mother usually bakes (bake) apple cake at the weekend, but birthday cakes are special.
Pryanga: Mum, _____ (you/need) my help?
Mum: No, I don’t. Dad’s in the garden, he _____ (pick) some cherries for your
cake now. But where’s Amit? _____ (he/decorating) the party room?
Pryanga: I don’t know! I _____ (have) a shower right now! I’ll help him with
the decoration when I’m ready. Oh, Ruby’s mum always _____ (put) chocolate chips in her
cherry cakes, it tastes soooo good! ______ (we/have) any?
Mum: Sure, darling, don’t worry. I’ve bought some last week!
In Pryanga's second sentence, the required answer is "I am having a shower right now!". The present progressive fits, since she's talking about what she is doing at this exact moment. It's not a future action nor something she will do in a few minutes or even hours. She's already doing it ("right now").
The student used a future form and wrote "I'm going to have a shower right now!" Does it sound natural, would this be preferable to the original answer?
Would this mean that she's on her way to the shower (as in "I'm going to have a shower now."), or does the expression "right now" imply that she's already under the shower, hence the present progressive? My humble opinion (more an intuition) makes me prefer the present progressive version, but I'm not a native speaker.