Greetings and salutations. My name is Ronnie, and today I'm going to teach you, by request,
some verbs that we like to call "stative verbs." "What are stative verbs?" you ask? Hmm. Stative
verbs are verbs that are not action verbs. So verbs like "jump" or "run" or "wave" or "smile"
all have actions to do with them. I like to call these "active verbs." How crazy. They are not
action verbs. They are stative verbs. Now, the rule about stative verbs is you cannot -- this
means don't do it -- use "to be" verb with the stative verbs, which I will explain with examples.
So, first of all, you have to know the groups or categories of stative verbs. I've broken them
down for you into four easy-to-remember categories. The first one is your feelings or your emotions,
how you feel. So, example, "love," "hate," "like." If it is a verb that has to do with what you feel
in your heart of hearts, you cannot say this. "This is wrong." Okay? Hmm. Then you're thinking,
"Uh-oh. Hey, Ronnie, you -- I went to a restaurant" -- we'll use that in quotations -- "and I saw
commercial, and it said, 'I'm loving it.'" Yes, it did, but I'm here to tell you that advertisements,
restaurants, creative license gives you or anyone the right to use grammar in a wrong fashion. So,
"This is actually wrong." The shock, the horror. What you have to say is, very simply, "I love it."
Yay. That's a heart. It looks like a heart, doesn't it? No. "I'm loving it" is incorrect.
Okay? You cannot say, "I'm hating it." Grammatically, it is wrong. "I'm liking it" grammatically is
wrong. But I say this a lot. I say, "I'm really liking my pizza." Grammatically, it is wrong. So,
when you have a grammar test, do not use "to be" verbs with these stative verbs. In casual
conversation, we, in slang, if you will, do say it. "We are wrong. We're such bad people."
The next category is senses. We have five senses. Smell, taste, hearing, and touch. Okay? So,
anything to do with hearing, see, sight, feel, smell, and sound is, again, hearing. You cannot
say, "I'm hearing the music." Grammatically, you have to say, "Oh, I hear the music." Again,
this is only for grammar. In conversation, we break all of these rules. "Oh, don't you love
conversation and hate grammar?" Next group is things that have to do with thinking or your
brain power. Now, feelings are from your brain as well, but we say they're from the heart. Thinking
is only brain functions. For example, "forget" -- what? "Forget" is the opposite of "remember." "Be"
-- "to be" -- you can't say, "I am being. I am being happy." Are you? Twice. Don't say it. "Know"
is knowledge. "Understand" -- "I am understanding" is not correct in English grammar. And "imagine"
-- "imagining" -- you cannot say, "I'm imagining" in grammar. Conversation -- yes. Grammar -- no.
And the last one is "belonging" -- something that you actually possess, you own, you have,
or it belongs to you. You cannot say, "I am having a marker." Are you having a marker? We would say,
"I'm having a baby," which is okay, but I can't have a marker. That would be odd. So, state of
verbs -- very important. In grammar, cannot be used with "to be" verbs. In conversation,