English speakers form many verb tenses by
combining one of principal parts of the verb
with one or more auxiliary verbs.
In order to form verb tenses you need a good grasp of the auxiliaries and the principal parts of the verb. There are four principal parts: the basic form, the present participle, the past form, and the past participle.
The basic form (or root of the verb is the form listed in
the dictionary and is usually identical to the
first person singular form of the
simple present tense (except in the case of
the verb "to be"):
- walk
- paint
- think
- grow
- sing
The infinitive form of the verb
is a compound verb made up of the the
preposition "to" and the basic form of
the verb:
- to walk
- to paint
- to think
- to grow
- to sing
To form the present participle, add "-ing" to the
basic form of the verb:
- walking
- painting
- thinking
- growing
- singing
Note that you cannot use the present participle as a
predicate unless you use an auxiliary verb
with it -- the word group "I walking to the store" is an
incomplete and ungrammatical sentence, while word group
"I am walking to the store" is a complete sentence.
You will often use the present participle as a
modifier.
The past form of verbs is a little trickier.
If the verb is regular (or
weak, you can create the
past form by adding "-ed", "-d", or "-t"
to the present form. When a basic form ends in
"-y", you changed the "-y" to "-i-"; in many cases you
should also double terminal consonants before adding "-ed" (see
the section on Spelling words with Double
Consonants).
- walked
- painted
- thought
- grew
- sang
The past participle of regular verbs is
usually identical to the past form, while the past participle of irregular verbs is often
different:
- walked
- painted
- thought
- grown
- sung
Irregular Verbs
Irregular verbs form the past participle and the past form without "-(e)d"
or "-t", and frequently their past form and
past participle are different. For example, the
past form of the verb "break" is
"broke" and the past participle is
"broken". |