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Present Participle or Past Continuous?

English Language & Usage Asked by Lihong Wang on January 13, 2021

A decade ago, nearly a million and a half elephants were living in Africa.

Does the word’living’ act as a present participle or verb of past continous

Please explain it to me.

2 Answers

What you have used is the imperfect tense, or as you call it, the past continuous.

It is formed from the simple past of the modal 'to be', and the present participle.

I was running, she was climbing, elephants were living, we were having dinner, you were going to college etc.

The imperfect implies continuity, unlike the past which refers to a snapshot in time.

Answered by WS2 on January 13, 2021

Combinations of the auxiliary verb BE and the -ing form of a lexical verb are generally known as progressive or continuous forms. The tense of the auxiliary is the tense of the whole form. ... were living is therefore past progressive/continuous.

The progressive forms were once labelled as tenses, but most modern grammarians, for example Quirk et et al (A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language, 1985.197) and Huddleston & Pullum( The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language, 2002.117) consider them to be aspects.

Answered by tunny on January 13, 2021

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