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Friday, January 28, 2011

Quick view of Regular and Irregular verbs



Quick view of Regular and Irregular verbs

VERB FORM

Problem

Although English verbs have only a few forms, it can still be difficult to remember which ending
to use in different grammatical situations, especially since some forms are used in more than
one pattern, and many verbs are irregular. 
 Solutions
 REVIEW THE BASIC PATTERNS and try to identify which form(s) give you the most
trouble so you can proofread for those.



  Simple Form 

 Present (-s,es)
3rd Person
Simple Past
(-ed)

Present
Participle (-ing)

Past
Participle
(-ed, -en)

Regular  talk
talk
debate
talks
debates
talked
debated
talking
debating
talked
debated
Irregular
be
go
have
write
is
goes
has
writes
was/were
went
had
wrote
being
going
having
writing
been
gone
had
written

Remember that the –ED ENDING on
regular verbs is used in four situations. (Some of
these forms vary with irregular verbs.)

Simple past tense:     I washed my car yesterday.
Perfect tenses:*    I have washed my car twice this week.
Passive voice:     My car has been washed.
Adjective:    I am excited, frightened, worried, etc.

      *Note: After any form of have, the next verb should be a past participle.
      She has been here before. We have finished.  We had seen enough, so we left.

If you tend to forget the -ed ending, it might be because you do not “hear” it as you read
your paper out loud or silently to yourself. To proofread, either enunciate this ending as a
way to internalize the form, or scan your paper for the grammatical situations listed above
and check for correct verb endings.


ADD –S OR –ES TO PRESENT TENSE VERBS when the subject is he, she, it or any other
third person singular noun. Be sure you check all the verbs in each sentence.

  I, you, we, they – do, go, have, contribute, see, watch
  he, she, it – does, goes, has, contributes, sees, watches 
She prefers a man who engages in conversation and who knows how to dance.
Advice usually comes when we don’t want it and is not available when we need it.


USE A GERUND (-ing) AFTER A PREPOSITION—by, for, from, in, of, on, etc. 

  The actor was worried about forgetting his lines.
  Students are responsible for proofreading their own papers.


USE THE SIMPLE FORM OF THE VERB (no endings!) AFTER INFINITIVE TO AND
MODALS (HELPING VERBS)—can, could, may, might, must, shall, should, will, would. 

  Incorrect:  She wants to partying tonight because she can sleeps tomorrow.
  Correct:  She wants to party tonight because she can sleep tomorrow.

Exceptions to these rules: a few phrases ending with to are followed by a gerund instead of
the simple form of the verb, such as object to, in addition to, be accustomed to, be devoted
to, be committed to, and be opposed to. Examples:

  We look forward to seeing you.
I’m used to sleeping with the window open.


PAY PARTICULAR ATTENTION TO ANY FORM OF TO BE—am, is, are, was, were, be,
being, been. These words are part of different grammatical patterns that have very
distinct meanings.

Active progressive sentence—use the gerund (-ing): 
She is working now. We will be going soon. He was studying hard when I called.

Passive sentence—use the past participle (-ed): 

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