Raquel
Hello, everyone! Hope you're all doing great. I'd like to know if the following sentence makes sense: "Today the weather is warm so we're walking around". Can I say 'we're walking around' meaning a future activity? Is the use of the present continuous to talk about the future correct? Also, does the phrase 'walk around' need an object? Thank you so much!
2023年12月1日 16:26
回答 · 5
2
You can use "walk around" without an object. Sometimes you can use the Present Continuous to talk about plans or arrangements in the future, but since you used the adverb "today" the way you said it sounds like you're walking now. Add the adverb "later" after "around" to clarify your intended meaning.
2023年12月1日
1
Present participles, by themselves, do not create any time frame. All that the sentence "We are walking" does is to attach "walking" as an adjective to the pronoun "we". That's all it does. It does nothing more. Consider the descriptions of the "present continuous tense" you find in grammar books to be nothing more than helpful guides to the most common possibilities of what it might mean. What it actually means depends on context. The time could be past, present, or future. Yes, it can even be past. Here's an example. Consider this conversation over the phone at noon on a sunny day. In the morning, Beth took a walk with her family and they plan to see a movie in the afternoon. Jane: Hi, Beth, what's up? What are you guys doing today? Beth: Oh, we're playing games, eating, walking around, and going to a movie. That is a valid use of "walking around" even though the walking part of Beth's day is already finished. On the basis of what Beth said, Jane has no way of knowing whether the walking is in the past, present, or future. All she knows is that the adjective "walking" describes the family in some unspecified way.
2023年12月2日
1
Hello i search for speking free In inglish I speak Spanish And Italian c2 Thanks for your collaboration
2023年12月1日
1
Today the weather is warm so we're walking around = present... happening right now. Today the weather is warm so we're going to walk around = future.
2023年12月1日
1
'We're walking around' would be used in present, generally, if you were currently walking around. Sometimes people do talk like this when they are announcing future plans, though. In your sentence, it includes 'today' marking that it will occur on that day--so, this makes it more clear. If you want to discuss the future more clearly, just insert 'going to be.' 'The weather is warm today, so we're going to be walking around.' Or: '...so we'll be walking around.' Or, more simply: '...going to walk around.' So, yeah, you can say it like that, especially if it's like an announcement of intention, but without context, it could be unclear/odd.
2023年12月1日
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