English With the exception of the highly irregular verb
be, an English verb can have up to five forms: its plain form (or bare
infinitive), a third person singular
present tense, a
past tense (or
preterite), a
past participle, and the
-ing form that serves as both a
present participle and
gerund. The rules for the formation of the inflected parts of
regular verbs are given in detail in the article on
English verbs. In summary they are as follows: • The third person singular present tense is formed by adding the ending
-s (or
-es after certain letters) to the plain form. When the plain form ends with the letter
-y following a consonant, this becomes
-ies. The ending is pronounced after a
voiceless consonant sound (as in
hops,
halts,
packs,
bluffs,
laughs), or after a voiced consonant or vowel sound (as in
robs,
lends,
begs,
sings,
thaws,
flies,
sighs), but after a
sibilant (
passes,
pushes,
marches). • The past tense and past participle are identical; they are formed with the ending
-ed (or
-t in some verbs), which as in the previous case has three different pronunciations (, , ). Certain spelling rules apply, including the doubling of consonants before the ending in forms like
conned and
preferred. There is some variation in the application of these spelling rules with some rarer verbs, and particularly with verbs ending
-c (
panic–panicked,
zinc–zinc(k)ed,
arc–arc(k)ed, etc.), meaning that these forms are not fully predictable, but such verbs are not normally listed among the irregular ones. (The verbs
lay and
pay, however, are commonly listed as irregular, despite being regular in pronunciation – their past forms have the anomalous spellings
laid and
paid.) • The present participle/gerund is formed by adding
-ing, again with the application of certain spelling rules similar to those that apply with
-ed. The irregular verbs of English are described and listed in the article
English irregular verbs (for a more extensive list, see
List of English irregular verbs). In the case of these: • The third person singular present tense is formed regularly, except in the case of the
modal verbs (
can,
shall, etc.) which do not add
-s, the verb
be (which has three present indicative forms:
am,
is and
are), and the three verbs
have,
do and
say, which produce the forms
has,
does (pronounced with a short vowel, ), and
says (pronounced with a short vowel, ). • The past tense and past participle forms are the forms most commonly made in irregular fashion. About 200 verbs in normal use have irregularities in one or other (or usually both) of these forms. They may derive from
Germanic strong verbs, as with
sing–sang–sung or
rise–rose–risen, or from weak verbs which have come to deviate from the standard pattern in some way (
teach–taught–taught,
keep–kept–kept,
build–built–built, etc.). (The past participle often ends in "n", " d" or "ed".) The past and past participle forms change in spelling sometimes. • The present participle/gerund is formed regularly, in
-ing (except for those
defective verbs, such as the modals, which lack such a form).
Common irregular verbs Some examples of common irregular verbs in English, other than modals, are: • arise • be • come • do • eat • fall • get • give • go • have • hear • know • lend • make • run • say • see • take • think • wear • drink • put • cut • catch • drive
Other languages For regular and irregular verbs in other languages, see the articles on the grammars of those languages. Particular articles include, for example: •
Dutch conjugation •
French verbs and
French conjugation •
German verbs and
German conjugation •
Ancient Greek verbs (for verbs in Modern Greek, see
Modern Greek grammar) •
Irish conjugation •
Italian conjugation •
Japanese verb conjugation and
Japanese irregular verbs •
Latin conjugation •
Portuguese conjugation •
Spanish verbs,
Spanish conjugation and
Spanish irregular verbs • Welsh has five irregular verbs whose conjugations differ between
spoken Welsh and
the literary language. The English equivalents of those Welsh verbs are irregular as well. Some grammatical information relating to specific verbs in various languages can also be found in
Wiktionary.
Constructed languages Most
natural languages, to different extents, have a number of irregular verbs. Artificial
auxiliary languages usually have a single regular pattern for all verbs (as well as other
parts of speech) as a matter of design, because inflectional irregularities are considered to increase the difficulty of learning and using a language. Other
constructed languages, however, need not show such regularity, especially if they are designed to look similar to natural ones. The auxiliary language
Interlingua has some irregular verbs, principally
esser "to be", which has an irregular present tense form
es "is" (instead of expected
esse), an optional plural
son "are", an optional irregular past tense
era "was/were" (alongside regular
esseva), and a unique subjunctive form
sia (which can also function as an imperative). Other common verbs also have irregular present tense forms, namely
vader "to go" —
va,
ir "to go" —
va (also shared by the present tense of
vader), and
haber "to have" —
ha. ==References==