1️⃣ Lesson Overview
In this lesson, you will study the present simple tense, one of the most frequently used verb forms in English. The present simple is used to describe general facts, habitual actions, routines, and permanent situations.
This tense is essential for expressing information that is considered generally true or regularly occurring.
You will also learn how the present simple interacts with frequency adverbs and time expressions, which often act as signal words indicating when the present simple tense should be used.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
✅ form the present simple tense correctly
✅ recognise the grammatical structure of affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences
✅ identify common signal words and time expressions associated with the present simple
✅ understand the major uses of the present simple tense
2️⃣ Concept Introduction
Consider the following sentences:
The Earth revolves around the Sun.
She works in a research laboratory.
They usually conduct experiments in the morning.
Each sentence expresses an action or fact that is generally true or regularly repeated.
| Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| The Earth revolves around the Sun | scientific fact |
| She works in a research laboratory | permanent situation |
| They usually conduct experiments | habitual action |
These meanings are typical of the present simple tense.
3️⃣ Core Explanation
The present simple tense is used to express:
-
general truths
-
repeated actions
-
habitual behaviour
-
permanent states
-
scheduled events
The present simple does not necessarily mean the action is happening at this exact moment. Instead, it describes something that is generally valid or regularly occurs.
Example:
Water boils at 100°C.
This statement describes a scientific fact.
Another example:
She teaches mathematics at the university.
This describes a permanent occupation.
4️⃣ Structure of the Present Simple
The present simple tense has different structures depending on the subject.
Affirmative Structure
| Subject | Verb Form | Example |
|---|---|---|
| I / You / We / They | base form | They study engineering. |
| He / She / It | base + -s | She studies engineering. |
Example:
The technician operates the equipment carefully.
Negative Structure
The negative form uses do not or does not.
| Subject | Structure | Example |
|---|---|---|
| I / You / We / They | do not + base verb | They do not understand the results. |
| He / She / It | does not + base verb | She does not operate the machine. |
Note:
When does is used, the main verb returns to the base form.
Interrogative Structure
Questions are formed using do or does.
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| Do + subject + verb | Do they understand the theory? |
| Does + subject + verb | Does she teach physics? |
Example:
Does the experiment produce reliable data?
5️⃣ Spelling Rules for Third Person Singular
When the subject is he, she, or it, the verb usually adds -s.
| Verb Type | Example |
|---|---|
| most verbs | work → works |
| verbs ending in -sh, -ch, -x, -o | teach → teaches |
| verbs ending in consonant + y | study → studies |
Examples:
She studies chemistry.
The machine operates automatically.
6️⃣ Main Uses of the Present Simple
1. General Truths
Used for facts that are always true.
Example:
Water freezes at 0°C.
2. Scientific Facts
Example:
The Earth orbits the Sun.
3. Habits and Routines
Example:
She reads scientific articles every evening.
4. Permanent Situations
Example:
The university offers several research programmes.
5. Scheduled Events
Example:
The conference begins tomorrow morning.
7️⃣ Signal Words and Frequency Adverbs
Certain words frequently indicate the present simple tense.
Frequency Adverbs
| Adverb | Meaning |
|---|---|
| always | 100% of the time |
| usually | very often |
| often | frequently |
| sometimes | occasionally |
| rarely | not often |
| never | 0% of the time |
Example:
She usually completes her research early.
Time Expressions
| Expression | Example |
|---|---|
| every day | She studies every day. |
| every week | The team meets every week. |
| on Mondays | The laboratory opens on Mondays. |
| regularly | Researchers regularly publish results. |
| generally | Scientists generally follow strict procedures. |
8️⃣ Position of Frequency Adverbs
Frequency adverbs usually appear before the main verb.
Example:
She often reviews the data carefully.
However, with the verb be, the adverb appears after the verb.
Example:
The results are usually reliable.
9️⃣ Common Errors
⚠ Common Error 1: Missing Third-Person -s
Incorrect:
She study chemistry.
Correct:
She studies chemistry.
Explanation:
Third-person singular verbs require -s.
⚠ Common Error 2: Using Present Continuous for General Facts
Incorrect:
Water is boiling at 100°C.
Correct:
Water boils at 100°C.
Explanation:
General truths require the present simple.
⚠ Common Error 3: Incorrect Negative Form
Incorrect:
She does not studies biology.
Correct:
She does not study biology.
Explanation:
After does, the verb remains in the base form.
⚠ Common Error 4: Incorrect Question Structure
Incorrect:
Works she in the laboratory?
Correct:
Does she work in the laboratory?
Explanation:
Questions require the auxiliary does.
⚠ Common Error 5: Incorrect Adverb Placement
Incorrect:
She studies always in the evening.
Correct:
She always studies in the evening.
Explanation:
Frequency adverbs usually appear before the main verb.
1️⃣0️⃣ Lesson Mastery
After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:
✅ form the present simple tense correctly
✅ recognise the main uses of the present simple
✅ identify common frequency adverbs and signal words
✅ avoid typical grammatical errors related to this tense