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Nina_Nia Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Going/walking

Hello,

Is it wrong to use the verb to walk in the progressive form?
I had to choose the correct verb in this exercise.
'Where are you walking/going to?' 'I am walking/going to my office.'
He likes walking/going.
He goes/walks a lot.
How often does your son go/walk there for the week-end?

Thanks
  

Top answer

Nina_Nia Is it wrong to use the verb to walk in the progressive form? You can say " I am walking right now not driving". " ( to go to a place not walk to).

  • Nina_Nia Is it wrong to use the verb to walk in the progressive form?
  • You can say " I am walking right now not driving".
  • " ( to go to a place not walk to).
  • Nina_Nia He likes walking/going He likes walking ( in his free time),or going for a walk .
  • He likes going.
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2 Answers
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Nina_NiaIs it wrong to use the verb to walk in the progressive form?
No,it's not wrong.You can say " I am walking right now not driving".
Nina_Nia'Where are you walking/going to?' 'I am walking/going to my office.'
Here," where are you going to ?",I am going to my office." ( to go to a place not walk to).
N
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Nina_NiaIs it wrong to use the verb to walk in the progressive form?
No.

We usually use 'go' when we say where we are going.

going to my office, to go there, to go into the bank, going home

But more importantly, you can't use 'go' if you are talking about walking as an exercise.

He likes walking. (He likes the

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