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The Simple Past - Coggle Diagram
The Simple Past
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As a general rule of thumb, we add “ed” to regular English verbs to make them past tense
If a regular verb ends in a consonant or a vowel other than e, the ending -ed is added.
If a regular verb ends with the letter e, the ending -d is added.
Regular verbs are the simplest to conjugate since their spelling in simple past or past participle is the same as in present tense adding a "d" or "ed" at the end
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The forms of the verb to be are: am, is and are (present), was and were (simple past), being (gerund) and been (past participle)
three forms: is, are, am that will accompany the personal pronouns of English: I with am; he, she, it with is, and we, you, they with are.
Its conjugations depart from that of the model verb by changes in the stem, in the ending or in both parts, in one or more of its verb forms. For example: taste, fall, laugh
o beat (beat, beat) beat beaten
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