Stative vs Dynamic Verbs exercises — Set 2: Dual-Function Verbs: Stative or Dynamic Meaning? (Worksheet)

Worksheet • 20 questions • 14 min

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1

I you should talk to her about the problem.

2

Don't bother Sarah right now. She about what to do next.

3

My grandmother a cottage in the countryside.

4

Please be quiet. The baby a nap.

5

I what you mean. It makes perfect sense now.

6

She a specialist about her back pain next Tuesday.

7

This soup amazing. What spices did you use?

8

At the moment, the chef the sauce to check if it needs more salt.

9

These flowers wonderful. Are they from your garden?

10

Look at her! She the flowers one by one to find the sweetest scent.

11

You tired today. Didn't you sleep well?

12

Look — she at the old photographs with a big smile.

13

I that we should wait a little longer before deciding.

14

Right now, the doctor the patient's knee carefully to find the injury.

15

My brother very tall. He's almost two metres.

16

Ignore him. He difficult on purpose.

17

She a lot about Japanese history.

18

My parents living by the sea. They never want to move.

19

David to travel to Japan next year.

20

I where I put my keys. Have you seen them?

Stative vs Dynamic Verbs exercises online (Worksheet)

Master dual-function verbs that can be both stative and dynamic. Practise choosing the correct form — present simple or present continuous — for verbs like think, have, see, taste, smell, look, feel, and be, depending on their meaning in context.