A Comprehensive Guide to 100+ Regular and Irregular Verbs in English
By
Lindsey Lange-Abramowitz, M.A.
Summary
A comprehensive guide to regular and irregular verbs in English, covering conjugation patterns for over 100 verbs. The article explains how regular verbs follow a predictable -ed pattern for past tense and past participle forms, while irregular verbs have unique forms that must be memorized. It provides a reference list of verb forms (present, past, and past participle) for learners of English as a second language.
Source
Key quotes
· 3 pulledMany English verbs follow a simple pattern to form the simple past and past participle.
However, not all verbs in English follow this pattern of adding -ed to the base verb. Instead, they have unique forms for the simple past and the past participle that have to be memorized.
With this guide, you will be ready to use any verb you need 💪
You might also wanna read
Japanese Verb Conjugation: A Comprehensive Guide to Transforming Dictionary Forms
A detailed guide to Japanese verb conjugation, explaining the patterns and rules for transforming dictionary-form verbs into various forms i
Exploring Grammatical Diversity: The Usage of 'Try' in North American English
The article discusses the grammatical diversity in North American English, focusing on the usage of 'try' followed by different phrases (nou
Generic Regex : How to use the couple of "Backtracking Control" verbs (*SKIP)(*FAIL) or (*SKIP)(*F) in regexes
The Missing Lexicon: How English Compound Phrases with Spaces Are Excluded from Dictionaries
The article explores the linguistic phenomenon of English compound phrases containing spaces that are systematically excluded from tradition
Across 1,900+ languages, reused word parts appear to be a middle-ground strategy: meanings stay partly linked in form, but not so similar that they are easily confused. @NatureHumBehav
Four Daily Practices That Transform Work and Life
The article explores a personal daily rhythm built around four verbs—learn, reflect, apply, and prepare—as a quieter, more sustainable alter

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.