Verbs with Stative and Dynamic uses
Verbs with Stative and Dynamic uses
Introduction
Verbs in English can be classified into two categories: stative verbs and dynamic verbs. Dynamic verbs (sometimes referred to as "action verbs") usually describe actions we can take, or things that happen; stative verbs usually refer to a state or condition which is not changing or likely to change. The difference is important, because stative verbs cannot normally be used in the continuous (BE + ING) forms. This will explain the differences between the two types of verb, and give lots of examples of each kind.
Dynamic verbs
There are many types of dynamic verbs, but most of them describe activities or events which can begin and finish. Here are some examples:
Dynamic verbs, as you can see from the table above, can be used in the simple and perfect forms (plays, played, has played, had played) as well as the continuous or progressive forms (is playing, was playing, has been playing, had been playing).
Dynamic Verb | Type | Examples |
---|---|---|
play | activity | She plays tennis every Friday. She's playing tennis right now. |
melt | process | The snow melts every spring. The snow is melting right now |
hit | momentary action | When one boxer hits another, brain damage can result. (This suggests only ONE punch.) When one boxer is hitting another, brain damage can result. (This suggests MANY repeated punches.) |
Stative verbs
Stative verbs usually refer to a state or condition which is quite static or unchanging. They can be divided into verbs of perception or cognition (which refer to things in the mind), or verbs of relation (which describe the relationships between things). Here are some examples:
Stative Verb | Type | Examples |
---|---|---|
hate | perception | I hate chocolate. |
believe | perception | She believes in UFOs. |
contain | relation | The box contains 24 cans of soda. |
own | relation | Yong owns three motorbikes. |
Note that we CANNOT use these verbs in the continuous (progressive) forms; you CAN'T say "*Yong is owning three cars." Owning is a state, not an action, so it is always in the simple form.
Example verbs
Here some common stative and dynamic verbs. The lists may help you to understand what types of verbs are likely to be stative and what types are commonly dynamic.
Stative Verbs | love; hate; like; see; hear; sound; think (meaning "have an opinion"); mind (meaning "care about"); recognize; seem; have (meaning "own"); prefer; doubt; consist of; mean |
---|---|
Dynamic Verbs | eat; drink; go; type; read; write; listen; speak; watch; say; grow; work; sleep; cook; talk. |
- Mohammed owns two different houses. He likes to live in his house by the sea when the weather is good, but in the winter he is preferring to live in the city.
- is preferring
- is
- owns
- likes
- I don't understand stative and dynamic verbs. They seem very confusing. I am hating them, because they are driving me crazy!
- am hating
- seem
- don't understand
- are driving
- While Keiko was fixing the car, I was making the supper. By six o'clock I had been working for eight hours, so I was needing a good meal.
- had been working
- was fixing
- was making
- was needing
- When I called Sarah, she said she watched TV, so she didn't want to come out with me, so I went to the pub alone.
- went
- watched
- called
- didn't want
- I play tennis every Tuesday. Last week, I was playing with John, a man I am knowing from work, when a bird flew into the tennis net.
- was playing
- flew
- play
- am knowing
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