Stative Verbs
Master Stative Verbs in English and learn when to use them correctly in sentences.
Stative verbs describe a state, not an action. They often show feelings, thoughts, possession, relationships, and the senses. They usually describe something that is true, felt, or known, rather than something that is happening as an activity.
Many stative verbs belong to clear meaning groups. These groups help you recognize them in sentences. A verb can be stative when it describes a condition or mental state.
| Word or Phrase | Definition |
|---|---|
| know | |
| love | |
| belong | |
| need | |
| own | |
| seem | |
| understand | |
| prefer |
Stative verbs usually do not appear in continuous forms such as the present continuous or past continuous. English often uses the simple form instead because the verb describes a state. This is the usual pattern, but some verbs change meaning in continuous forms.
| Rule |
|---|
Some verbs can be stative or dynamic. The meaning changes with the context, so the form can change too. This is an area where usage can vary, and speakers do not always agree in every situation.
| Word or Phrase | Definition |
|---|---|
| think | |
| have | |
| see | |
| taste | |
| feel | |
| be |
Stative verbs are often used in the present simple and past simple. These forms describe states that are true now or were true before. Subject and time still control the verb form in the normal way.
| Subject | Form |
|---|---|
| I | |
| you | |
| he she it | |
| we | |
| they |
In the past simple, stative verbs describe a state, feeling, thought, or possession in an earlier time. The meaning stays stative even when the time changes. Regular and irregular past forms depend on the verb.
| Verb | Form |
|---|---|
| know | |
| have | |
| love | |
| belong | |
| feel |
You can now identify many stative verbs by their meaning and use them in simple forms. You can also notice when a verb changes from a state meaning to an action meaning. This helps you choose between simple and continuous forms more accurately.