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Regular and Irregular verbs, finished in "-ED", "-D",…
Regular and Irregular verbs
Irregular
We use irregular verbs to form some verb tenses. It is understood that verbs take different forms in the language.
English irregular verbs are those verbs that do not follow a general rule of formation of the Past and Past Participle.
Thus, we say that some are irregular when the base form, when passing to the simple past or past participle, does not end in -ed.
Example
Do - Did
Read - Read
Break - Broke
Go - Went
Group 24:
Marianna Schuthz
Gabriel Santos
Gabriel Souza
Rebecca Campos
Regular
Examples
start → started
kill → killed
jump → jumped
Regular past simple forms are formed by adding -ed to the infinitive of the verb. That seems easy! Yes, but there are some spelling rules. If a verb ends in -e, you add -d.
Regular past tense verbs are formed by the suffix -ed, both in the simple past and in past participle tenses.
The basic formation of the Simple Past is done with the use of the auxiliary did in the interrogative forms, and with the addition of –ed, –ied or –d to the end of the main verb in the infinitive, without the to, in the infinitive.
finished in "-ED"
travel – traveled (viajar)
start – started (começar)
look – looked (olhar)
"-D"
love – loved (amar)
live – lived (viver, morar)
like – liked (gostar)
"-IED"
study – studied (estudar)
try – tried (tentar)
cry – cried (chorar)