grammatical tense; pertaining to current time relative to speaker/writer/reader
The present tense is the form of a verb that describes actions or states of being happening now, at the time you're speaking or writing. It matters because it's one of the most fundamental ways we communicate what is actually going on in the current moment.
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The present tense (abbreviated PRES or prs) is a grammatical tense whose principal function is to locate a situation or event in the present time. The present tense is used for actions which are happening now. In order to explain and understand present tense, it is useful to imagine time as a line on which the past tense, the present and the future tense are positioned. The term present tense is usually used in descriptions of specific languages to refer to a particular grammatical form or set of forms; these may have a variety of uses, not all of which will necessarily refer to present time. For example, in the English sentence "My train leaves tomorrow morning", the verb form leaves is said to be in the present tense, even though in this particular context it refers to an event in future time. Similarly, in the historical present, the present tense is used to narrate events that occurred in the past.
There are two common types of present tense form in most Indo-European languages: the present indicative (the combination of present tense and indicative mood) and the present subjunctive (the combination of present tense and subjunctive mood). In English, the present tense is mainly classified into four parts or subtenses.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).