Present Continuous vs Present Simple
English has two present tenses, and choosing between them is one of the first real meaning decisions you make. Use the present simple for habits, routines, and facts: "I usually take the bus." Use the present continuous for actions happening right now or just temporarily: "I'm taking a taxi today." Watch out for stative verbs like know, want, and like, which describe states rather than actions and stay in the simple form even when they apply to this moment: "I know the answer" (never "I'm knowing").
Examples
- I usually take the bus. the speaker's habit is the bus
- I'm taking a taxi today. just for today, a taxi
- I know the answer. the speaker knows it
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
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A dog races past and you shout Look! He runs! It's grammatical — but no native speaker would ever say it. Here's why.
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English has two presents. The present simple is for what's always true — habits, routines, and facts. The present continuous is for what's happening right now.
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The simple is just the verb: I work. The continuous is am, is, or are plus the -ing form: I'm working. So always ask one question — is this a habit, or is it happening now?
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Start with a habit. Most days, you take the bus — that's a routine, so it's present simple. I usually take the bus.
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But today is different. Just for now, you're in a taxi — a temporary action, so it switches to the continuous. I'm taking a taxi today.
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Words like always, usually, and every day point to the simple — they describe your routine. She works in Paris.
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Now words like now, today, and this week point to the continuous — the action is around the moment of speaking, even if it lasts a few days. She's working from home this week.
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Now the exception that trips everyone up. Stative verbs — verbs about thinking, feeling, and owning, like know, want, and like — stay simple. They describe a state, not an action, so they almost never take -ing.
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Even though you know it right at this moment, know is a state — so it stays present simple. I know the answer.
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So here's the first classic mistake: using the continuous for a habit. If it happens every day, it's a routine — that's the simple.
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And the mirror mistake: using the simple for something happening right now. Back to our dog — it's running this second, so it must be the continuous.
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So before you choose, ask: is it always true, or is it happening now? Habits and facts take the simple; this-moment actions take the continuous; and states stay simple.