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Marold Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

I have been wanting to

I am reading Harry Potter in english at the moment and I came across this in direct speech:

"I have been wanting to...(tell you, ask you...- those are only the examples of use I've seen)"

I have been told the verb "want" is a stative verb, barely or almost never used in progressive tenses.
=> Additionally, I know it is okay to use "wanting" as gerundium or the present participle.

Therefore, I am wondering whether this instance is just a matter of informal use in direct speech or if there is anything else I actually do not know yet about stative verbs.

Thanks in advance.
  

Top answer

The verb want is often in present perfect progressive to show that a desire has existed for some time in the past. It gives a sense of urgency. Once I tell you or ask you, the "want" will be gone.

  • The verb want is often in present perfect progressive to show that a desire has existed for some time in the past.
  • It gives a sense of urgency.
  • Once I tell you or ask you, the "want" will be gone.
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1 Answers
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The verb want is often in present perfect progressive to show that a desire has existed for some time in the past. It gives a sense of urgency. Once I tell you or ask you, the "want" will be gone.

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