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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

I am in the process of learning English.

I am in the process of learning English. VS. I am learning English.

Is there a meaning difference between them? And can we say that the process is equal to learning English as my dream of being a teacher? Thank you so much as usual and have a good day.
  

Top answer

Anonymous I am in the process of learning English. VS. I am learning English.

  • Anonymous I am in the process of learning English.
  • VS.
  • I am learning English.
  • Anonymous Is there a meaning difference between them?
  • Depending on the context, they could be equivalent.
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2 Answers
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AnonymousI am in the process of learning English. VS. I am learning English.
AnonymousIs there a meaning difference between them?
Depending on the context, they could be equivalent.

To say that you're in the process of something is usually used to stress that the process is incomplete.
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Thank you so much and we say that my dream = being a teacher in 'my dream of being a teacher', the fact = that we love English in 'the fact that we love English' and the idea = meeting them in 'the idea of meeting them'. And we also can say the process = learning English in the process of learning English? I hope that I can make it clear.

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