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

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."

Jeremy Bee's picture
LearnEnglish
team

Hello jratkai!
 
Thank you for another interesting comment! However, this website is written for English learners, and is not intended as a scientific reference; the page demonstrates features of English grammar. The detail you add is not really suitable for many of our learners, and, as I suggest in answer to your comment below, the statement itself is not exactly wrong.
 
Regards
 
Jeremy Bee
The LearnEnglish Team

jratkai's picture

Wrong example: "something that is always true:
The human body contains 206 bones."
"At birth, there are over 270 bones in an infant human's body, but many of these fuse together as the child grows, leaving a total of 206 separate bones in an adult."
cf http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone

Jeremy Bee's picture
LearnEnglish
team

Hello jratkai, again!
 
Well, it's not exactly wrong, since in statements like these you are assumed to be talking about a standard, fully developed body - someone who has lost a limb will have fewer bones, for example, but this does not invalidate the statement. Qualifying every single statement can lead to a lot of repetition and unnecessary detail, and in different circumstances, (as, for example, on an English language web page rather than in an encyclopaedia) different degrees of accuracy are needed. I have, however, edited the page to add the word adult.
 
Regards
 
Jeremy Bee
The LearnEnglish Team

jratkai's picture

Instead of "We use words like sometimes, often. always, and never (adverbs of frequency) with the present tense:" should not you write
"We use words like sometimes, often. always, and never (adverbs of frequency) with the simple forms in any tense:"?

Jeremy Bee's picture
LearnEnglish
team

Hello jratkai!
 
Thanks for your comment. This is true, but the page is about the present simple, not adverbs of frequency generally.
 
Regards
 
Jeremy Bee
The LearnEnglish Team

paperinique's picture

hello, I'm Fabio i have some doubt about the right answer to "he never drinks beer" sentence in 10/12 question of present tense's exercise.....you indicate "happens again and  again" while I have answered "always true", my doubt is about  "never", I have thought that it means an action always done and so, always true......it's wrong?
thanks in advance..:)

Jeremy Bee's picture
LearnEnglish
team

Hello paperinique!
 
I can understand your confusion. Here, though, it's still an action, not a fact like Monday is the first day of the week. Think of it as meaning He doesn't drink beer. Offer him a beer on Monday, he says no. Offer him a beer on Tuesday, he says no. Offer him a beer on Wednesday, he says no ... As you can see, it's an action that happens again and again! I shouldn't worry too much about it though - the important thing is to use present tenses for a statement like that.
 
Regards
 
Jeremy Bee
The LearnEnglish Team

paperinique's picture

thank you very much.....:)