Generally, we use the Present Continuous tense to talk about actions taking place now or around now. But English speakers often use the Present Continuous to talk about pre-arranged plans or events.
When we use the Present Continuous with this meaning, it is necessary to add a time reference (tomorrow, tomorrow evening, on/next Sunday) so we know it refers to the future and not to the present:
Note: We can often use ‘going to’ instead of the Present Continuous to indicate future meaning. – Nick is spending time with his family tonight. – Nick is going to spend time with his family tonight. |
To make the Present Continuous with future meaning, we use:
am / is / are + the ‘-ing’ form of the verb (Present Participle) and add a time marker.
We form the negative by adding ‘not‘ to either the full form or short (contracted) form:
am / is / are + not + the ‘-ing’ form of the verb
To form a question, we rearrange the word order, placing the verb ‘be’ before the subject:
am / is / are + subject +the ‘-ing’ form of the verb
We often use the Present Continuous to talk about future arrangements. A future arrangement is a plan that we have decided and organised with another person, a group of people or a company:
It is not always necessary to state who the arrangement is with:
We often use the Present Continuous to talk about things we are about to start doing. This is especially common with verbs of movement, such as go, come, leave, etc.:
Certain verbs, actions or situations cannot be used with the Present Continuous with future meaning because they are not part of a plan, an arrangement or an intention. The present continuous tense for the future can only be used when an action or situation can logically be planned in advance:
Here’s a good video from To Fluency explaining the difference between ‘will’, ‘going to’ and Present Continuous for future actions and events:
See also:
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