Question
Which sentence uses the indicative form of the verb play?
Are you playing video games?
Are you playing video games?
Play video games with me.
Play video games with me.
I am playing video games.
I am playing video games.
I wish you were playing video games.
Are you playing video games?
Are you playing video games?
Play video games with me.
Play video games with me.
I am playing video games.
I am playing video games.
I wish you were playing video games.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The sentence that uses the indicative form of the verb "play" is:
"I am playing video games."
In this sentence, "am playing" is in the present continuous tense, but it indicates a current action and is therefore considered indicative. The verb "play" in its base form is used in imperative mood in "Play video games with me," which is not indicative. The other options involve subjunctive or interrogative forms.
"I am playing video games."
In this sentence, "am playing" is in the present continuous tense, but it indicates a current action and is therefore considered indicative. The verb "play" in its base form is used in imperative mood in "Play video games with me," which is not indicative. The other options involve subjunctive or interrogative forms.