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Anonymous Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Present Simple Tense/ Present Indefinite Tense?

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I am an English student. My teacher told me that there is a second name of Present simple Tense which is Present Indefinite Tense. Is this correct?

  

Top answer

Certain uses of the simple present tense are present indefinite tense. When the verb indicates something that happens habitually, expresses a universal fact, or tells a routine, it is present indefinite tense. She drinks a lot.

  • Certain uses of the simple present tense are present indefinite tense.
  • When the verb indicates something that happens habitually, expresses a universal fact, or tells a routine, it is present indefinite tense.
  • She drinks a lot.
  • The sun rises in the east.
  • He gets up at 6.
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1 Answers
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Certain uses of the simple present tense are present indefinite tense. When the verb indicates something that happens habitually, expresses a universal fact, or tells a routine, it is present indefinite tense.

She drinks a lot.

The sun rises in the east.

He gets up at 6.

Other uses of the simple present express other concepts like the immediate futu

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