enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of English irregular verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_English_irregular_verbs

    For each verb listed, the citation form (the bare infinitive) is given first, with a link to the relevant Wiktionary entry. This is followed by the simple past tense , and then the past participle. If there are irregular present tense forms (see below), these are given in parentheses after the infinitive.

  3. English irregular verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_irregular_verbs

    This is formed similarly to the verb's past tense had. The verb say displays vowel shortening in the third person present indicative (although the spelling is regular): says /sɛz/. The same shortening occurs in the past form said /sɛd/. (Compare the diphthong in the plain form say /seɪ/.)

  4. List of commonly misused English words - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_commonly_misused...

    awaken and awoken: Awaken is typically used to express waking in the present tense. Awoken is typically used to express waking in the past tense. [24] Awoken is the original "hard verb" inflection of "to wake", but through morphological leveling the soft form awakened has become more common. Standard: We must awaken the dragon.

  5. Past tense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Past_tense

    The past tense of regular verbs is made by adding -d or -ed to the base form of the verb, while those of irregular verbs are formed in various ways (such as see→saw, go→went, be→was/were). With regular and some irregular verbs, the past tense form also serves as a past participle. For full details of past tense formation, see English verbs.

  6. Imperfect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperfect

    Turkish has separate tenses for past continuous and imperfect. To form the past continuous tense for Turkish verbs, after removing the infinitive suffix (-mek or -mak), take the present continuous tense suffix "-yor" without personal suffixes, and add the ending for the simple past plus the appropriate personal suffix

  7. English verbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_verbs

    The past participle of regular verbs is identical to the preterite (past tense) form, described in the previous section. For irregular verbs, see English irregular verbs. Some of these have different past tense and past participle forms (like sing–sang–sung); others have the same form for both (like make–made–made).

  8. Wikipedia:List of spelling variants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:List_of_spelling...

    spoilt, spoiled – but note that in American and Canadian English, spoiled is both a past-tense verb (e.g. the milk spoiled) and a past-participial adjective (the spoiled milk). In British English, spoiled is usually the past-tense verb (the milk spoiled), and spoilt is usually the past-participial adjective (the spoilt milk) [5]

  9. Tense confusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tense_confusion

    "He saw that she is very tall." Research in linguistics regards such sentences as instances of the sequence of tense phenomenon. There is, in fact, a meaning contrast between the following two sentences. This meaning contrast is lost when so-called "tense confusions" are prescribed against.