English irregular verbs
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This is a table of English irregular verbs.
Regular verbs in English have three forms:
- the base, which is equivalent to the infinitive without 'to' and most forms of the present tense
- the -s form, which is used for the third person singular of the present tense
- the past tense form, which is also used for the past participle, and which consists of adding -ed to the base, or, in the case of verbs ending in -e, -d only.
Irregular verbs have these forms, and form the -s form regularly: bears from bear. But many of them have past participles that differ from the past tense, as is the case with béãr, bŏre, bŏrn (she bore him, he was born). (The accents, which are not part of the language, are included to show stress and pronunciation: see English spellings for a table and English phonemes for the IPA. Words in italics suggest meaning, and an equals sign is placed between homophones.) Others have associated passive adjectives, as in 'she was beholden to no-one', from the verb 'behold'.
base | past | past participle | past passive adjective |
---|---|---|---|
béãr birth | bŏre | bŏrn | |
béãr suffered, carried | bŏre | bŏrne | |
bêat | bêat | bêaten | |
begín | begán | begún | |
behóld | behéld | behéld | behôlden |
bénd | bént | bént | |
berêave | berêaved | berêaved | beréft |
besêech | besŏught | besŏught | |
bíd auction | bíd | bíd | |
bíd ask | báde (= bád wrong) | bídden | |