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A1~3 min read

Present Simple

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We use the present simple to talk about habits, routines and things that are generally true. Think of actions you repeat: every day, on Mondays, twice a week.

For I / you / we / they the verb keeps its base form: I work, you eat, we study. Time words like every day, usually, often and always are common signals that the present simple is the right tense.

예문

  • I wake up at seven every day.

    A daily habit — base form 'wake' after 'I'.

  • We study English on Mondays.

    A regular, repeated action.

  • They sleep eight hours a night.

    Something generally true.

wake up

/weɪk ʌp/

I wake up at seven every day.

eat

/iːt/

She eats breakfast at home.

work

/wɜːk/

He works in an office.

study

/ˈstʌdi/

We study English on Mondays.

sleep

/sliːp/

They sleep eight hours a night.

Choose the correct form: We ___ English on Mondays.

Complete with the present simple: They ___ eight hours a night. (sleep)

When the subject is he, she or it, we add -s to the verb: he works, she lives, it rains. This is the rule learners forget most often, so watch for it.

Spelling tweaks: verbs ending in -ch, -sh, -ss, -x or -o add -es (watch → watches, go → goes). Verbs ending in a consonant + y change y to ies (study → studies). The verb 'have' becomes 'has'.

예문

  • She lives in Paris.

    he/she/it → add -s: live → lives.

  • My dad watches the news every evening.

    Ends in -ch, so add -es: watch → watches.

  • The bus goes to the station.

    go → goes (-es after -o).

  • It has four wheels.

    Irregular: have → has.

lives

/lɪvz/

She lives in Paris.

plays

/pleɪz/

He plays football on Sundays.

watches

/ˈwɒtʃɪz/

My dad watches the news every evening.

goes

/ɡoʊz/

The bus goes to the station.

has

/hæz/

It has four wheels.

Choose the correct form: She ___ breakfast at home.

Complete with the correct form: My dad ___ the news every evening. (watch)

To make a negative we use don't (do not) for I / you / we / they, and doesn't (does not) for he / she / it.

Important: after doesn't the main verb loses its -s, because doesn't already carries it. So we say 'She doesn't work' — not 'She doesn't works'.

예문

  • I don't like coffee.

    don't for I/you/we/they.

  • He doesn't work on Fridays.

    doesn't + base verb (not 'works').

  • They don't understand the question.

    don't keeps the verb in base form.

don't like

/doʊnt laɪk/

I don't like coffee.

don't speak

/doʊnt spiːk/

We don't speak French.

doesn't work

/ˈdʌzənt wɜːk/

He doesn't work on Fridays.

doesn't know

/ˈdʌzənt noʊ/

She doesn't know the answer.

don't understand

/doʊnt ˌʌndərˈstænd/

They don't understand the question.

Choose the correct negative: She ___ the answer.

Make it negative with the present simple: We ___ French. (not / speak)

To ask a yes/no question we start with Do (for I / you / we / they) or Does (for he / she / it), then the subject, then the base verb.

Just like negatives, after Does the verb has no -s: 'Does he speak English?' — not 'Does he speaks'. Short answers: Yes, I do. / No, she doesn't.

예문

  • Do you live here?

    Do + you + base verb.

  • Does he speak English?

    Does + he + base verb (not 'speaks').

  • Do they have children?

    Do for they; verb stays base.

Do you

/duː juː/

Do you live here?

Does he

/dʌz hiː/

Does he speak English?

Does she

/dʌz ʃiː/

Does she like tea?

Do they

/duː ðeɪ/

Do they have children?

Choose the correct question: ___ English?

Complete the question: ___ you live here? (do)

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