Become is an irregular verb. Became is the past form of become.
become = present
became = past
become = past participle
John has become a rather good actor. This is present perfect. Here the verb become is in it's past participle form.
John has became a rather good actor. This is not correct. Don't use past form with has/have. To make a past simple sentence just use the past form of become:
John became a rather good actor.
my question is which is the correct regular and irregular verbs: John has become a rather good actor or john has became a rather good actor.
become is an irregular verb.
"become" is an irregular verb because its principal parts are become, became, become.If it were regular the principal parts would be become, becomed, becomed.Have is also an irregular verb has is the singular form of have. So there are two irregular verbs in this sentence.* John has became a good actor.This is not correct. Become is an irregular verb. Its forms are:become = presentbecame = pastbecome = past participle.For a present perfect sentence use the past participle = become.John has become a rather good actor.Regular verbs add -ed to make the past form egwalk = walked, talk = talked
In these sentences there are two verbs has and become (became). Both of them are irregular.Has is the singular form of have, have is an irregular verb.Become is an irregular verb it's past form is became the past participle form is become. --- become / became / become.The sentence is a present perfect sentence. The form for present perfect is have/has + past participle.So the correct verb is has become because become is the past participle.
Can't understand your question here. Both sentences are exactly the same both use the irregular verb become.
"John has become a rather good actor" is correct. The verb is in the present perfect tense, which is formed by combining the present tense of "have" with the past participle of the main verb. In this instance the main verb is "become" and its irregular past participle is also "become". "Became" is correct only in the simple past tense.
Yes, "pray" is considered an irregular verb because its past tense form is "prayed" rather than the regular "-ed" ending as in most verbs.
Yes, "smiled" is an irregular verb. The base form is "smile," and the past tense form changes to "smiled" rather than adding "-ed" as with regular verbs.
Yes, become is a verb (become, becomes, becoming, became).
Yes, if it were completely regular, its past tense would be 'taked' rather than 'took'. 'Taken' is the past participle of the verb, and the past participle is a place where regular has a different kind of meaning. The form it takes does roughly qualify as regular.
To form the past tense of regular verbs, -ed is added to the end of the word.For example, 'laugh' becomes 'laughed'.With regular verbs, the simple past tense and the past participle forms are the same.Irregular verbs aren't as simple. There is no simple way like there is with regular verbs but rather you have to just learn the list of irregular verbs.An example of an irregular verb is 'eat'.The simple past is 'ate' whilst the past participle is 'eaten'.
the most common difference is that irregular adjectives are those adjectives that do not use suffixes "er" for comparative and "est" for superlative for example: the adjective "bad" it does not use the suffixes "er" and "est" but rather it form its comparative as "worse" and its superlative as "worst". it doesn't use the suffixes "er" and "est" unlike regular adjectives.