A1

Present Continuous

Present Continuous

Present Continuous in English

Overview

The present continuous (also called present progressive) is one of the most frequently used tenses in English. It describes actions that are happening right now, temporary situations, and future arrangements. If someone asks "What are you doing?" your answer will almost certainly use the present continuous.

At the CEFR A1 level, the present continuous is typically the second tense you learn after the present simple. While the present simple describes habits and permanent states ("I work in a bank"), the present continuous describes what is happening at this moment or around this time ("I'm working on a report right now").

The structure is straightforward: a form of "be" (am/is/are) plus the -ing form of the main verb. The main challenge is learning the spelling rules for adding -ing and understanding which situations call for this tense rather than the present simple.

How It Works

Formation

Subject Be Verb + -ing Example
I am working I am working.
He/She/It is working She is working.
You/We/They are working They are working.

Contractions (Very Common in Speech)

Full Form Contraction
I am I'm
He is / She is / It is He's / She's / It's
You are / We are / They are You're / We're / They're
is not isn't
are not aren't

Spelling Rules for -ing

Rule Base Form -ing Form
Most verbs: add -ing work working
Ends in -e: drop -e, add -ing make making
Short verb, one vowel + one consonant: double the consonant sit sitting
Ends in -ie: change to -y, add -ing lie lying
Ends in -ee: just add -ing see seeing

Three Main Uses

Use Example Signal Words
Happening now I'm reading a book. now, right now, at the moment
Temporary situation She's working from home this week. this week, these days, currently
Future arrangement They're coming tomorrow. tomorrow, next week, on Saturday

Questions and Negatives

Type Structure Example
Question Be + subject + -ing? Are you coming?
Wh-question Wh- + be + subject + -ing? What are you doing?
Negative Subject + be + not + -ing I'm not working today.

Examples in Context

English Note
I am reading a book. Action happening now
She's working from home this week. Temporary situation
What are you doing? Question about current activity
They're coming tomorrow. Future arrangement
He isn't listening to me. Negative -- action happening now
We're learning English. Ongoing process around now
Is it raining outside? Yes/no question
I'm not feeling well today. Temporary state
The children are playing in the garden. Description of current scene
She's always complaining! Repeated annoying behavior (with "always")

Common Mistakes

Forgetting the "be" verb

  • Wrong: I working now.
  • Right: I am working now. or I'm working now.
  • Why: The present continuous requires both "be" (am/is/are) and the -ing verb. Without "be," it is not a complete sentence.

Using present continuous for habits

  • Wrong: I'm going to work every day.
  • Right: I go to work every day.
  • Why: Regular habits and routines use the present simple. The present continuous is for actions happening now or temporarily.

Spelling errors with -ing

  • Wrong: She is makeing dinner.
  • Right: She is making dinner.
  • Why: When a verb ends in -e, you must drop the -e before adding -ing. "Make" becomes "making," not "makeing."

Double consonant errors

  • Wrong: He is siting down.
  • Right: He is sitting down.
  • Why: Short verbs with one vowel followed by one consonant double that consonant: sit > sitting, run > running, stop > stopping.

Usage Notes

In British English, the present continuous is sometimes used more broadly for temporary situations and future plans. American English also uses it this way, but may slightly prefer "going to" for some future plans.

The contraction forms (I'm, she's, they're) are standard in both spoken and written informal English. In formal writing, the full forms are preferred. In conversation, using full forms can sound overly stiff or emphatic.

Using "always" with the present continuous expresses annoyance or criticism: "You're always losing your keys!" This is different from the neutral "You always lose your keys" (present simple = just a fact).

Practice Tips

  • Describe what you see: Look out a window or around a room and describe everything happening: "A man is walking his dog. Two children are riding bikes. The sun is shining."
  • Text a friend right now: Send a message describing what you are doing at this exact moment. Real-time communication naturally uses the present continuous.
  • Compare with present simple: Write pairs of sentences: "I drink coffee every morning" (habit) vs "I'm drinking coffee right now" (happening now). This builds your instinct for choosing the right tense.

Related Concepts

  • Prerequisite: To Be - Present Tense -- you need to know am/is/are to form the present continuous
  • Next steps: Stative Verbs -- learn which verbs cannot be used in the continuous form
  • Next steps: Future with Going to -- learn how to use the present continuous structure for future plans
  • Next steps: Participle Clauses -- advanced use of -ing forms in complex sentences

Prerequisite

To Be - Present TenseA1

Concepts that build on this

More A1 concepts

Want to practice Present Continuous and more English grammar? Create a free account to study with spaced repetition.

Get Started Free