Simple Present


The simple present tense in English is used to describe an action that is regular, true or normal.

1.For repeated or regular actions in the present time period.

I take the train to the office
The train to Berlin leaves every hour
John sleeps eight hours every night during the week

2. For facts.

The President of The USA lives in The White House
A dog has four legs
We come from Switzerland

3. For habits.

I get up early every day
Carol brushes her teeth twice a day
They travel to their country house every weekend

4. For things that are always / generally true.

It rains a lot in winter
The Queen of England lives in Buckingham Palace
They speak English at work

We form the present tense using the base form of the infinitive (without the TO).

In general, in the third person we add ‘S‘ in the third person.

SubjectVerbThe Rest of the sentence
I / you / we / theyspeak / learnEnglish at home
he / she / itspeaks / learnsEnglish at home

The spelling for the verb in the third person differs depending on the ending of that verb:

go – goes
catch – catches
wash – washes
kiss – kisses
fix – fixes
buzz – buzzes
marry – marries
study – studies
carry – carries
worry – worries
play – plays
enjoy – enjoys
say – says

When the subject is he, she or it, we add doesn’t between the subject and the verb to make a negative sentence. Notice that the letter S at the end of the verb in the affirmative sentence (because it is in third person) disappears in the negative sentence. We will see the reason why below.


Don’t = Do not
Doesn’t = Does not

I don’t like meat = I do not like meat.

There is no difference in meaning though we normally use contractions in spoken English.


The following is the word order to construct a basic negative sentence in English in the Present Tense using Don’t or Doesn’t.

subjectdon’t/doesn’tVerb*The Rest of the sentence
I / you / we / theydon’thave / buy
eat / like etc.
cereal for breakfast

* Verb: The verb that goes here is the base form of the infinitive = The infinitive without TO before the verb. Instead of the infinitive To have it is just the have part.

Remember that the infinitive is the verb before it is conjugated (changed) and it begins with TO. For example: to have, to eat, to go, to live, to speak etc.

Examples of Negative Sentences with Don’t and Doesn’t:

You don’t speak Arabic
John doesn’t speak Italian
We don’t have time for a rest
It doesn’t move
They don’t want to go to the party
She doesn’t like fish


To make a question in English we normally use Do or Does. It has no translation in Spanish though it is essential to show we are making a question. It is normally put at the beginning of the question.

Affirmative: You speak English.
Question: Do you speak English?

When the subject is he, she or it, we add DOES at the beginning to make the affirmative sentence a question. Notice that the letter S at the end of the verb in the affirmative sentence (because it is in third person) disappears in the question. We will see the reason why below.

Affirmative: He speaks French.
Question: Does he speak French?
We DON’T use Do or Does in questions that have the verb To Be or Modal Verbs (can, must, might, should etc.)

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