present simple

 

The present tense is the base form of the verb: I work in London.
But the third person (she/he/it) adds an -s: She works in London.

Use

We use the present tense to talk about:

  • something that is true in the present:

I’m nineteen years old.
He lives in London.
I’m a student.

  • something that happens again and again in the present:

I play football every weekend.

We use words like sometimes, often. always, and never (adverbs of frequency) with the present tense:

I sometimes go to the cinema.
She never plays football.

  • something that is always true:

The adult human body contains 206 bones.
Light travels at almost 300,000 kilometres per second.

  

  • something that is fixed in the future.

The school term starts next week.
The train leaves at 1945 this evening.
We fly to Paris next week.

 

Questions and negatives

Look at these questions:

Do you play the piano?
Where do you live?
Does Jack play football?
Where does he come from?
Do Rita and Angela live in Manchester?
Where do they work?

  • With the present tense, we use do and does to make questions. We use does for the third person (she/he/it) and we use do for the others.

 

 We use do and does with question words like where, what and why:

 

 But look at these questions with who:

Who lives in London?
Who plays football at the weekend?
Who works at Liverpool City Hospital?

Look at these sentences:

I like tennis, but I don’t like football. (don’t = do not)
I don’t live in London now.
I don’t play the piano, but I play the guitar.
They don’t work at the weekend.
John doesn’t live in Manchester. (doesn’t = does not)
Angela doesn’t drive to work. She goes by bus.

  • With the present tense we use do and does to make negatives. We use does not (doesn’t) for the third person (she/he/it) and we use do not (don’t) for the others.

Complete these sentences with don’t or doesn’t:

Exercise

Comments

Nomi221's picture

John doesn’t live in Manchester.
Angela doesn’t drive to work.
and my question is that As you stated that
The present tense is the base form of the verb: I work in London.
But the third person (she/he/it) adds an -s: She works in London.
then why you did'nt add S with Live and drive in the above examples.
Please clarify it also please,,, I am waiting for the answers of both of my questions please Help.

Nomi221's picture

If we look at the Questions and negatives !
(1)Does Jack play football?
and
(2)Do Rita and Angela live in Manchester?
now in the First sentence Jack is third person that is why Does came in the first But in the second one why do came with Rita And Angela ?
Please Do clarify it to me please!
 

sam5582's picture

good  for me nice

noebibin's picture

Hello everyone. Please help.
In this sentence "he never drinks beer" ,why not "drink"?
Thanks.

Peter M's picture
LearnEnglish
team

Hello nebibin,
This is a sentence with a verb in the Present Simple tense (click here for more information and an exercise on this). When we make a sentence with this tense in the third person (he, she or it) then we add -s to the verb, and so we need to have 'drinks' in the sentence.
I hope that helps you.
Best wishes,
 
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team

suresh143143's picture

its because . he/she/it are third person singular. so we have to add "s" to the main verb. e.g. 1=he plays 2 = it runs 3= she goes to school at 8.30 am
 
I Hope You understand

noebibin's picture

Thanks suresh143143.
Then can you help me. What's the difference between I feel hungry and I am feeling hungry? Thanks before.

Peter M's picture
LearnEnglish
team

Hello noebibin,
It’s a good question and the answer is that there is really no difference. ‘Feel’ can be a stative verb or a dynamic verb (click for information about stative verbs), which means it can be simple (“I feel”) or continuous (“I’m feeling”) and the meaning doesn’t change.
You can find an exercise on stative verbs here.
Best wishes
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team

Fachrudin Ar Razie's picture

thanks a lot ...

jratkai's picture

Sorry to correct again. A language teacher does not have to know science, (s)he is good at sg else. You are much better in English than me.
But if you want a quality website, I propose to change "Light travels at almost 300,000 kilometres per second." to "Light travels at almost 300,000 kilometres per second in vacuum.". Because the speed of photons is not constant, but changes when they light enters into a different kind of matter. Moreover, "Light of different frequencies may travel through matter at different speeds; this is called dispersion. In some cases, it can result in extremely slow speeds of light in matter."