I wouldn't use (even remotely) that sentence to express future intention.There's a remote possibly that you could say "I brush my teeth today" to indicate that's what you plan to do.
I wouldn't use that either.@emsr2d2 Wouldn't it be the same as "I go to work today"?
Can I say the following?Another possibility is you could remove "today" and say, "I work hard."
I am going to work today.I wouldn't use that either.
#1 is OK.Can I say the following?
1. I always work hard .
2. I always work hard, Yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
3. I always brush my teeth, Yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
It's grammatically possible. Whether it's appropriate depends on the context.I am going to work today.
Is that correct?
The first one is fine. In fact, there are about a million things you could use instead of "work hard".Can I say the following?
1. I always work hard .
2. I always work hard, Yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
3. I always brush my teeth, Yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
Yes, that's fine.I am going to work today.
Is that correct?
Errors:Can I say the following?
1. I always work hard .
2. I always work hard, Yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
3. I always brush my teeth, Yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
What's the difference between:You can make the first one work if you change it slightly, thus: "I work hard every day."
The second one is fine.
We use the present simple when talking about regular occurrences/habitual actions/absolute facts.Both are in present simple. Is that correct?
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