'Jump' is a regular verb, and is a good example.
The past participle and the simple past or regular verbs are both formed by adding '-ed' to the verb. (If the verb ends with an 'e', just add '-d', e.g. love/loved, bake/baked )
Examples:
Simple present: Those boys jump all the time.
Past simple: They jumped in the lake last week!
Present perfect (using the past participle): ... and they have jumped in it again!
Regular verbs in English look like this: infinitive: to answer present tense: I answer, we answer, you answer, he answers, they answer past tense: answered future tense: will answer
i need examples of vivid verbs
Yes I could, but for regular verbs the past tense and past participle all end in -ed e.g. walk - walked - walked, talk - talked - talked and for verbs ending in E, add D e.g. move-moved-moved, live-lived-lived, seize-seized-seized So they are very easy to form and there is no need to have a list.
Simple past - gave Past participle - given Present participle - giving
Because these verbs are regular the past and past participle are formed by adding -ed. So there is no need to write the past and past participle here.Click on 'related links' below to see a list of 600 regular verbsacceptaddadmireadmitadviseaffordagreealertallowamuseanalyseannounceannoyanswerapologiseappearapplaudappreciateapprovearguearrangearrestarriveaskattachattackattemptattendattractavoidbackbakebalancebanbangbarebatbathebattlebeambegbehavebelongbleachblessblindblinkblotblushboastboilboltbombbookboreborrowbouncebowboxbrakebranchbreathebruisebrushbubblebumpburnburybuzzcalculatecallcampcarecarrycarvecausechallengechangechargechasecheatcheckcheerchewchokechopclaimclapcleanclearclipclosecoachcoilcollectcolourcombcommandcommunicatecomparecompetecomplaincompleteconcentrateconcernconfessconfuseconnectconsiderconsistcontaincontinuecopycorrectcoughcountcovercrackcrashcrawlcrosscrushcrycurecurlcurvecycledamdamagedancedaredecaydeceivedecidedecoratedelaydelightdeliverdependdescribedesertdeservedestroydetectdevelopdisagreedisappeardisapprovedisarmdiscoverdislikedividedoubledoubtdragdraindreamdressdripdropdrowndrumdrydust
Regular verbs have the same past tense and past participle (-ed ending).Paint -- The man painted the room.Accept -- With her chin held high, she acceptedher fate.Divide -- We divided our assets between us.
Not sure what you want when you say 'definition'. The form of a future perfect sentence is: subject + will/shall + have + past participle = I will have finished or She will have eaten. I guess the definition of a future perfect verb is its the past participle. For regular verbs it's the same as past simple eg worked, for irregular verbs it's a different word eg eaten. Most grammar books have lists of verbs that give the past participle.
Regular verbs in English look like this: infinitive: to answer present tense: I answer, we answer, you answer, he answers, they answer past tense: answered future tense: will answer
i need examples of vivid verbs
Yes I could, but for regular verbs the past tense and past participle all end in -ed e.g. walk - walked - walked, talk - talked - talked and for verbs ending in E, add D e.g. move-moved-moved, live-lived-lived, seize-seized-seized So they are very easy to form and there is no need to have a list.
The simple past and past participle are both dangled.
Simple past - gave Past participle - given Present participle - giving
Because these verbs are regular the past and past participle are formed by adding -ed. So there is no need to write the past and past participle here.Click on 'related links' below to see a list of 600 regular verbsacceptaddadmireadmitadviseaffordagreealertallowamuseanalyseannounceannoyanswerapologiseappearapplaudappreciateapprovearguearrangearrestarriveaskattachattackattemptattendattractavoidbackbakebalancebanbangbarebatbathebattlebeambegbehavebelongbleachblessblindblinkblotblushboastboilboltbombbookboreborrowbouncebowboxbrakebranchbreathebruisebrushbubblebumpburnburybuzzcalculatecallcampcarecarrycarvecausechallengechangechargechasecheatcheckcheerchewchokechopclaimclapcleanclearclipclosecoachcoilcollectcolourcombcommandcommunicatecomparecompetecomplaincompleteconcentrateconcernconfessconfuseconnectconsiderconsistcontaincontinuecopycorrectcoughcountcovercrackcrashcrawlcrosscrushcrycurecurlcurvecycledamdamagedancedaredecaydeceivedecidedecoratedelaydelightdeliverdependdescribedesertdeservedestroydetectdevelopdisagreedisappeardisapprovedisarmdiscoverdislikedividedoubledoubtdragdraindreamdressdripdropdrowndrumdrydust
Sure, regular verbs are verbs that follow a predictable pattern when conjugated in different tenses. Examples of regular verbs include "walk" (walked, walking), "play" (played, playing), and "talk" (talked, talking).
Regular verbs (present past and past participle) walk / walked / walked, Look / looked /looked, regulate / regulated / regulated irregular verbs (present past and past participle): run / ran / run, steal / stole / stolen, cut / cut / cut, shake / shook / shaken, tell / told / told
To form past simple you add -ed to the verb. These verbs are called regular verbs.walk - walked listen - listened organize - organizedBUT there are irregular verbs theses verbs you don't add -ed to make past simple you have another word or sometimes the same word. You have to memorize irregular verbsrun - ran cut - cut dig - dug think - thought
Gave is the simple past tense of give. The past participle is given.