Grammar: Using stative verbs in the continuous tense
Here’s a grammar question for you: is it ever OK to use state verbs in the continuous form?
Dan shows us when it is possible in this bite-sized video.
For the transcript, a quiz and grammar notes, visit our website:
Transcript:
Hi Guys! Angelic Dan for BBC Learning English here. This week we’re going to be looking at state verbs. Now, there are some verbs in English which talk about states, not actions. These are called ’state verbs’ and the rules of English say that we can never ever use these verbs continuously. And we don’t break the rules of English do we? Cos we’re good people aren’t we? Yes!
Examples of state verbs are words like: be and love and want. They usually concern feelings or possession or sensory information. Oooh - a magic potion. UGH! Lies! You can make state verbs continuous. You just have to be bad enough to bend the rules a little.
So, many so-called state verbs have two different forms – a state one and a dynamic one. Using the verb in one form or another changes its meaning. Consider: “I have a car“ or “I’m having a shower“. This is very apparent with the verb be which in the continuous form means ’temporarily acting’. For example, “Mike’s usually so energetic: why’s he being so lazy?“
We can also use the present continuous and an adverb such as always, forever and constantly to show irritation for a repeated habit that annoys us. “I’m forever understanding things too late to do anything.“ Or, “I know I quit, but I’m constantly wanting a cigarette.“
We often make state verbs continuous for the purposes of being tentative and polite. In this way, we can make awkward questions less direct without accidentally offending the other person. This is very common in the past continuous and the future continuous. Compare: “Sorry to interrupt. I want to borrow the car.“ Or, “Sorry to interrupt. I was wanting to borrow the car.“ Or, “I’m going into town - I need some money.“ Or, “I’m going into town - I’ll be needing some money, so errr...“
Sometimes we deliberately use a state verb in the continuous form to emphasise a strong feeling at the moment of speaking. A certain fast food chain, which you all know about, uses this as its marketing slogan. For example, “I went to a party last night and I was loving it!“ Or, “I don’t care how long the chef took to cook it. I’m not accepting that.“
Finally, never forget that there are idioms and set phrases which use state verbs in the continuous form. For example, “I just don’t know what to do about this situation; it’s really weighing on my mind.“ Or, “I’ve been seeing my partner for over six months, self-five!“
One last thing guys. We use these forms occasionally. Don’t go crazy with them, just understand that while in most cases state verbs stay in the simple form, you can break a rule or two, now and then. If you want.
Did you get it? I don’t care if you got it. I’m getting a drink.
1 view
14
2
1 week ago 00:31:07 1
35 Advanced English Verb Rules
4 weeks ago 01:12:23 2
Socrates - Father of Western Philosophy Documentary
4 weeks ago 01:18:55 1
Henry V - Agincourt & The Hundred Years War Documentary
4 weeks ago 00:03:03 1
Numbers Vocabulary | How to Say Numbers in English | English Pronunciation
4 weeks ago 11:54:56 1
Daily English Conversation Practice || Improve English Speaking Skills || Level-1- American English
4 weeks ago 01:08:26 1
Henry IV - The First Lancastrian King Documentary
4 weeks ago 00:03:22 1
ONE-MINUTE ENGLISH: instrumental in LEARN WITH LEXICAL LAB
4 weeks ago 00:12:08 1
Difference between MADE OF / MADE FROM / MADE WITH / MADE OUT OF - Incredibly Useful English Grammar
4 weeks ago 00:04:05 1
Disclosure feat. London Grammar - Help Me Lose My Mind
4 weeks ago 00:01:49 1
Where Are You? ♫ | Rooms In A House | Wormhole Learning - Songs For Kids
4 weeks ago 00:07:17 1
Grammar: Active and Passive Gerunds
1 month ago 02:54:12 6
Learn ALL Tenses in English: The Complete Course
1 month ago 00:08:35 1
I Converted AI Text to Human Text for 30 Days and Got Shocking Results
1 month ago 00:31:24 1
Daily Use English Question Answers | Fun Learning Question Answers
1 month ago 00:10:10 1
English Podcast For Learning English | Talk About Daily Routine | Episode 1
1 month ago 00:07:30 1
London Grammar - Big Picture (Kyotto Remix)
1 month ago 00:06:42 1
A passion for science: Frankenstein episode 1
1 month ago 00:45:36 1
Master ALL English Tenses | A1-B2 English Grammar (FREE PDF! 📄)
1 month ago 00:15:16 2
How to Teach Beginners English: 13 Fundamentals You Need to Use
1 month ago 00:13:14 1
Basic English Adjectives Opposite Adjectives in English EASY ENGLISH for BEGINNERS
1 month ago 01:33:52 1
Solomun - Meg Myers - Foals - Age Of Love - Hunter/Game • TIMELESS (Vasho Mix)
1 month ago 00:09:12 3
Learn English Through Story Level 1, Graded Reader Level 1, Stories Short Beginners, Basic English