Some examples are:
Verbs that form their past and past participle by adding ed, d, or t to the present are called _____ verbs.
In English,strong, or irregular verbs form their past tenses by means of ablaut, that is a change in the stem vowel. They are among the oldest and commonest of English verbs. For example take:took; come:came; see:saw; write:wrote, and so on. The verbs to go and to be even have a different stem - or two!- in the past tenses.Weak, or regular verbs form their past tenses by the addition of the suffix, -d, -ed or -t, without changing the stem vowel. For example ask:asked; donate:donated; learn; learned or learnt. Some otherwise regular verbs may distinguish between the active and the passive past participle, for example proved:proven and mowed:mownNewly coined verbs are weak, and it may seem that the productive period of strong verbs is over, but the English speaker's affinity for the older, strong forms is still in operation, as seen in popular usages like dive:dove and sneak:snuck, where the "correct" past forms are dived and sneaked, respectively.
Strong verbs are the very common verbs like be, go, run and take, to name a few, that do not form the past tense by adding -ed to the stem. Instead, strong verbs change at least the vowel and sometimes the entire stem: was/were for be; went for go; ran for run; took for take, etc.CommentThe key feature of a strong verb is (usually) that the simple past tense and the past participle do not end in -ed (or -t used in place of -ed). Often the stem vowel changes, too. Examples of strong verbs (British English)sing - sang - sungbreak - broke - brokenrun - ran - runhit - hit - hitbite - bit - bittengrow - grew - growncome - came - comewrite - wrote - writtenarise-arose-arisenbeget-begot-begotten
Tattletaling
The use of the T form for the past tense is an original British English form that is observed less frequently in US English, except for some words, such as kept, crept, slept, swept, and wept (and also dreamt). Most verbs use the -ED past tense forms, e.g. equipped.
Some past tense verbs that end in 'T' are:BitFeltFoughtHitKeptLeftLostMeantPutSpentTaughtBeatBuiltSetLitNote that verbs ending this way are irregular verbs.
Verbs whose past tense does not end in "ed" or "t" are irregular verbs. This means their past tense form does not follow the regular pattern of adding "-ed" or "-t" to the base form of the verb.
Verbs that form their past and past participle by adding ed, d, or t to the present are called _____ verbs.
Most verbs are regular verbs and to make the past tenses you add -ed.walk / walked, talk / talked, organise / organised.Some verbs are irregular this means you don;t add -ed to make the past tense the past tense is another word or sometimes the same word.run / ran, swim / swam, sleep / slept, cut / cut, meet / met.
A regular verb does not change its stem. An irregular verb generally changes its stem. Example: Ich schwimme - du schwimmst is a regular verb because the stem schwimm- does not change Example: Ich gebe - du gibst is an irregular verb because the stem geb- changes to gib. Regular verbs add the ending -t in the past tense. ie. geglaubt Irregular verbs add the ending -en in the past tense. ie. gegeben
In English,strong, or irregular verbs form their past tenses by means of ablaut, that is a change in the stem vowel. They are among the oldest and commonest of English verbs. For example take:took; come:came; see:saw; write:wrote, and so on. The verbs to go and to be even have a different stem - or two!- in the past tenses.Weak, or regular verbs form their past tenses by the addition of the suffix, -d, -ed or -t, without changing the stem vowel. For example ask:asked; donate:donated; learn; learned or learnt. Some otherwise regular verbs may distinguish between the active and the passive past participle, for example proved:proven and mowed:mownNewly coined verbs are weak, and it may seem that the productive period of strong verbs is over, but the English speaker's affinity for the older, strong forms is still in operation, as seen in popular usages like dive:dove and sneak:snuck, where the "correct" past forms are dived and sneaked, respectively.
PLANE
All verbs are essentially action. What some refer to as linking verbs are all derivatives of "to be", which has caused pholosophers problems (the ontological problem) since Plato. Who of course wasn´t English anyway!
irregular polygons don;t have equal angles
Tie
Examples of verbs that start with T are:tacktagtainttaketalktametampertaptargettastetattleteachtearteasetelephonetelltempertemptterminateterrifyterrorizetesttestifythankthawthinkthreadthreatenthrivethrowthrustticktickletietilttinkertiptoasttorpedotorturetosstouchtourtowtracetradetrailtraintrampletranquilizetranscribetransfertransformtranslatetransporttraptrashtraveltreadtreattrembletricktrimtriptrottroubleshoottrusttrytucktugtumbleturntutortweaktwirltwisttype
I t would have to be a irregular trapizium ahhh dreamy I luv trapiziumsA.S