6.9 Estar con el presente progresivo
¡Sí puedo! Can-Do Statements
Use the present progressive to talk about actions ongoing in the present moment.
Estar con el presente progresivo
The present progressive (or continuous) is a compound construction of two verbal forms that cannot be separated by any other word. The progressive may be used in different tenses by only changing the conjugation of the verb estar (past, present, or future) and leaving the gerund (-ing) in its intact form. For now, let’s focus on the present:
Subject Pronoun + estar (conjugated) + gerund
What’s a gerund? In English, gerunds all end in -ing: reading, dancing, singing, etc. (For more on gerunds in English, see the entry on gerunds in the Guide to Writing.)
In Spanish, the ending of the gerund depends on the kind of verb:
- for -ar verbs: drop the “r” and add -ndo –> -ando
- for –er and -ir verbs: drop the “-er” or “-ir” and add -iendo
- Stem-changing -ir verbs (not -ar or -er verbs!) change their stem vowels as follows: o>u, e>i.
- Verbs that change from e>ie and e>i in the present tense, change e>i in the gerund form.
- The gerund of the verb ir is irregular: yendo.
Ejemplos:
- –ar verbs:
- cantar — cantando (singing)
- hablar—hablando (speaking)
- trabajar—trabajando (working)
- –er verbs:
- beber— bebiendo (drinking)
- comer— comiendo (eating)
- -ir verb:
- escribir— escribiendo (writing)
- vivir— viviendo (living)
- stem-changing -ir verbs:
- dormir— durmiendo (sleeping)
- preferir-– prefiriendo (preferring)
- servir– sirviendo (serving)
Escribir=to write
singular |
plural |
|
1a | yo estoy escribiendo | nosotros estamos escribiendo |
2a | tú estás escribiendo | vosotros estáis escribiendo |
3a | él/ella/usted está escribiendo | ellos/ellas/ustedes están escribiendo |
Important:
- To form a negative sentence in the present progressive, place the *no* in front of the form of estar: No estoy escribiendo.
- Remember that the present progressive is used to express an action in progress.
Review the differences in meaning:
— Estudio español. (An ongoing situation over a period of time: you are taking Spanish as part of your studies this semester.)
— Estoy estudiando español. (An action in progress right now: you have your book out or a site open and you are actively studying a lesson or preparing right now.)
Note: In English, the present progressive tense can refer to events in the future (“We are going to the movies tonight”), but in Spanish, the present progressive always refers to ongoing action. For future actions, Spanish uses the present tense or the future tense.
Licenses and Attributions
Lumen Learning authored content
- Estar con el presente progresivo. Authored by: SUNY Oneonta with Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution
- Bajando. Authored by: Rachel Zaccaro. License: CC BY: Attribution
- Sigan subiendo. Authored by: Rachel Zaccaro. License: CC BY: Attribution