A regular verb is a verb that is made past tense by adding -ed.
eg walk - walked, move - moved
An irregular verb has a different word for the past tense.
eg run - ran, buy - bought, catch - caught
become - became. So become is an irregular verb
no sorry
regular verb
It's an irregular verb.
The word to "go" is a verb. It is an irregular verb.
its an inflecting of the verb "Go" its used with the pronouns he, she and it for example : -He goes to the club everyday -she goes to her mother on Fridays (same thing with "It" but i cant think of examples for it)
The word desire is a regular verb. It can also be used as a noun.
Yes it's an open syllable.
I'm pretty sure this is the difference...but I'm not french so don't expect it to be the best one. Irregular is like the verb aller(to go) in french; it was completely different endings. Here are the endings for aller:Je vais (I go)Tu as (you go)Il/Elle va (He/She goes)Nous allons (We go)Vous allez (You go)*Ils vont (They go)**Let's just put it like this: Irregular verbs are the ones that end differently. If it was english, it would be verbs like "buy". (The past tense would be "bought".)The regular verbs are the ones like "walk" in english. (The past tense:walked)Regular and irregular verbs all have teminations. I suggest you go to about.com for more information, because they have exellent explanations.* you use the word vous is used for important people, elders, etc. etc. (example: the president) OR when you're talking to a lot of people and you're calling all of them "you". It that case, it would be like a plural "you".**The word Ils is for "They". The feminine form of it is Elles, but if the "they" is both girl and boys, it would automatically be Ils.
irregular
the irregular verb TO GO, WENT, GONE.Go is an irregular verb. The past tense of go is went and the past participle of go is gone.
Went is the past tense of go.Go is an irregular verb. Because the past tense is not formed by adding -ed ie goed is not correct. The past tense of go is a new word = went.You can say went is the irregular past of go.
The word to "go" is a verb. It is an irregular verb.
The French word 'partir' translates to 'to leave', 'to go away' or 'to depart'. It is an irregular verb, so when conjugating use the verb 'etre' instead of 'avoir' like you would with a regular verb.
In the context of grammar, regular refers to a word or verb form that follows a predictable pattern or rule. For example, regular verbs in English add -ed to form the past tense. Irregular, on the other hand, describes words or verb forms that do not follow these patterns and must be memorized individually. Irregular verbs in English, for instance, have unique forms in the past tense, such as "go-went" or "come-came."
You can talk about its tense - past present future,how it is used ie main verb or auxiliary verb,is it a regular or irregular verbBasic sentence:She goes to work every dayThe verb goes is the present tense, third person singular form, of the irregular verb go
its an inflecting of the verb "Go" its used with the pronouns he, she and it for example : -He goes to the club everyday -she goes to her mother on Fridays (same thing with "It" but i cant think of examples for it)
The word desire is a regular verb. It can also be used as a noun.
The verb in Spanish for "to go" is "ir". It is an EXTREMELY irregular verb, and most of the conjugations look noting like the base verb.
"Caer" is an irregular verb, meaning it doesn't follow the standard rules for an -er verb in all of the tenses.One user said:"Caer" is a "go" verb meaning that in the present tense the 1st person singular ends with "go" Otherwise it is a regular er verb.*caigocaescaecaemoscaéiscaen*From this root, you get the present subjunctive:caigacaigascaigacaigamoscaigáiscaigan
The verb went is the irregular past tense of the verb "to go".I went to the park on Saturday. (something you did in the past)The play was written by his uncle, so he went to see it.