• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Articles & lessons
    • Grammar & vocabulary lessons
    • IELTS preparation
    • British culture
    • All articles and lessons
  • About
  • Contact
Crown Academy of English

English lessons and resources




You are here: Home / English lessons / Present simple tense in English

Present simple tense in English

30th June 2016 by Andrew

In English, there are 2 present tenses:

  • The present simple
  • The present continuous

They are very different in both their form and also their use and meaning.

In this grammar lesson, we will look in detail at the present simple.

Form

Affirmative

I work
you work
he works / she works / it works
we work
you work
they work


Only the third person singular changes (he / she / it) by adding a letter “s“

Negative

I do not work
you do not work
he does not work/ she does not work / it does not work
we do not work
you do not work
they do not work

Again, only the third person singular (he / she / it) is different (does not)

 

Question

Do I work?
Do you work?
Does he work? / Does she work? / Does it work?
Do we work?
Do you work?
Do they work?

For the question form, don’t forget the question mark (?) at the end of the sentence.

Rules for the third person singular spelling

Remember, that the affirmative form is the subject + base form except for the third person singular.

Here are the rules for the third person singular form of different types of verb:

For most regular verbs, we add –s to the base form:

work -> works
sit -> sits
stay -> stays

For Verbs ending in -s, -z, -ch, -sh or -x, we add –es to the base:

miss -> misses
watch -> watches
push -> pushes

For Verbs ending in consonant + y, we change y to i and add -es

cry -> cries
hurry -> hurries
reply -> replies

Exceptions and irregular verbs:

have -> has
go -> goes
do -> does

The uses and meaning of the present simple

Facts or permanent situations

We use the present simple to describe facts or things that always happen. We are talking in general.

Example:

Cows

Cows eat grass.

(We are talking in general. We are not describing a specific cow.)

Example:

Ice

Water freezes at 0°C

Example:

Question: Where does Peter work?
(This is a general question, so we use the present simple and NOT the present continuous)

If the question is in the present simple, then our answer must also be in the present simple:

Answer: Peter works in an office.
(We are stating a general fact. We are NOT describing specifically where Peter is now.)

Things that happen regularly, repeatedly or all the time

They play football every week.

I play football every week. correct
I am playing football every week. wrong

Do you go to church every Sunday? correct
Are you going to church every Sunday? wrong

Verbs which do NOT have a continuous form

Some verbs only have a simple form. They do not have a continuous form.

They are often verbs where there is no real action:

-hate, like, love, need, prefer, want, wish.
-believe, imagine, know, mean, realise, recognise, remember, suppose, understand.
-belong, concern, consist, contain, depend, involve, matter, need, owe, own, possess.
-appear, resemble, seem.
-hear, see

Example:

This chocolate cake is nice. I am wanting another piece please. wrong
This chocolate cake is nice. I want another piece please. correct

 

Video lesson

Below is a video lesson about the present simple with more examples and exercises.
All our English lessons on YouTube

Filed Under: English lessons

More lessons

Modal verb SHOULD – form, use and meaning

"should" is a modal verb. Pronunciation strong form:   /ʃʊd/Pronunciation weak form:   /ʃəd/ In this lesson, you will … [Read More...] about Modal verb SHOULD – form, use and meaning

Direct speech

Direct speech writing rules in English

In the above picture, Mark is talking to Jane. The words inside the blue box are the exact words that he speaks. Here is how we express … [Read More...] about Direct speech writing rules in English

Confused

QUIET or QUITE – Confusing English words

This English class has 2 versions: 1) Video version  and 2) Text version. I recommend that you watch the video in order to listen to the … [Read More...] about QUIET or QUITE – Confusing English words

London

Meaning and use of “to be used to”

Let's look at an example sentence: I like living in London. I am used to the noise. Meaning: I am accustomed to the noise in London. It is not … [Read More...] about Meaning and use of “to be used to”

park

The difference between BEEN and GONE

This lesson explains the difference between “been” and gone” in the context of visiting a place. Both "been" and "gone" can be used to describe … [Read More...] about The difference between BEEN and GONE

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. S.Mohanraju says

    30th January 2017 at 4:01 pm

    really very interesting and eagerly waiting to know more about grammar.

    • Farmanullah says

      7th April 2019 at 11:08 am

      Eagerly waited. Not eagerly waiting.

  2. sandra molle says

    13th January 2018 at 8:50 pm

    you explain very clear.Thank you !

  3. sandra molle says

    13th January 2018 at 8:51 pm

    It is always a clear explanation. Thank you very much indeed

  4. Farman ullah says

    7th April 2019 at 11:07 am

    In fact this is the way to explain something explicitly. Wonderful.

Primary Sidebar

Lessons

native english speaker

How to understand native English speakers

girl reading

How to improve your English vocabulary

peas on spoon

“a little” and “a few ” to describe quantity

doctor

The difference between practice and practise

Girl wearing headphones

Difference between hear and listen

handbag

compliment or complement





Footer

Follow us on social media

Crown Academy of English on YouTube Crown Academy of English on Twitter

Privacy policy

Privacy policy

Recent

  • 8 ways to say that something is FREE in English
  • English idioms and expressions related to CRIME
  • How to use either and neither – English lesson
  • Learn English vocabulary – Vegetables
  • English Idioms related to speed

Search