What is the difference between "I'm in no mood " and "I was in no mood"? I asked my mentor and he told me they're both the same, but I see that these are different in regards to tense.
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You are correct!
"I'm in no mood" is present tense, meaning currently you are not in the mood to (wash dishes, do paperwork, go swimming, etc.)
"I was in no mood" is past tense, meaning before the current moment you were not in the mood to (wash dishes, do paperwork, go swimming, etc.)
jmrpink
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thanks for your correcting my post, and for your answer. – duy hoang Jul 24 '18 at 13:02