it is a verb because its showing action:)
It is a regular verb because the past is formed by adding -ed to the verb.
share / shared
The verb "to be" is an irregular verb.
Lie is an irregular verb and the past tense is lay.Lie is only an irregular verb.
Complete is a regular verb.
talks is a form of the verb talk so is talked and talking.There is no irregular verb for talk. Talk is a regular verb not an irregular verb.Some verbs are regular verbs - this means you make the past tense by adding -ed for example - talk/talkedSome verbs are irregular verbs - this means the past tense is not made by adding -ed for example - run/ran
It is a regular verb.
The verb "to be" is an irregular verb.
Be is an irregular verb.
No, "person" is not a verb at all --- it's a noun. However, verbs can occur in various personal forms, and person in verbs can be irregular. For instance, the third person forms of the verb "be" are irregular "is/was/are/were".
Lie is an irregular verb and the past tense is lay.Lie is only an irregular verb.
Complete is a regular verb.
talks is a form of the verb talk so is talked and talking.There is no irregular verb for talk. Talk is a regular verb not an irregular verb.Some verbs are regular verbs - this means you make the past tense by adding -ed for example - talk/talkedSome verbs are irregular verbs - this means the past tense is not made by adding -ed for example - run/ran
It is a regular verb.
Yes, it's the irregular simple past tense of swim.
What makes some verbs irregular is the way the tenses change for those verbs. A regular verb changes according to a pattern: play, plays, played, etc. For an irregular verb, it changes to something seemingly random: awake, awoke, etc.
In contrast to regular verbs, irregular verbs are those verbs that fall outside the standard patterns of conjugation in the languages in which they occur. The idea of an irregular verb is important in second language acquisition, where the verb paradigms of a foreign language are learned systematically, and exceptions listed and carefully noted. Thus for example a school French textbook may have a section at the back listing the French irregular verbs in tables. Irregular verbs are often the most commonly used verbs in the language.
Yes, not only are "is" and "are" verbs, they are two forms of the same verb, "be".See link below for a complete conjugation of that irregular verb in English.
I discovered that there's a deeper logic in the irregular verbs