basic form past tense past participle
accelerate accelereted accelerated
adapt
adopt
alarm
astonish
believe
call
cancel
care
carry
chase
chat*
clap*
close
collect
commit* Edit categories
concentrate
continue
cry
dance
dare
delay
delete
deny
destroy
dislike
divorce
drop*
enjoy
fill
finish
fix
focus
form
happen
hate
help
hire
install
jog*
jump
like
listen
live
look
love
marry
mix
need
open
play
pick
rent
repair
save
search
shave
smell
smile
spy
stare
start
stay
stop*
surf
surprise
surrender
talk
travel
treat
try
utter
walk
want
wash
watch
work
worry
* = Double the last consonant in these verbs before adding ed.
dropped, committed, stopped......etc.
xylophone
voice of verb 100 example with answer
Regular verb's past and past participle are the same. egwalk / walked / walkedIf you click on' related links' below, the link will take you to a list of common regular English verbs
The verb to blast is a regular verb. The past participle of regular verbs is formed by verb +ed.i.e. BlastedExample: Explorers were blasted by icy winds blowing at 100 kph as they tried to cross Antarctica.
Ugly
discount means a deduction from the regular price of something formula for getting the MARKDOWN or discount: discounted price = regular price minus (% off multiplied by the regular price) Example: 30% off of $100 = 30% discount applied to $100 = $100 - (30% * $100) = $100 - (0.30 * $100) = $100 - $30 = $70
discount means a deduction from the regular price of somethingFormula for getting the discount:discounted price = regular price minus (% off multiplied by the regular price)Example:30% off of $100= 30% discount applied to $100= $100 - (30% * $100)= $100 - (0.30 * $100)= $100 - $30= $70
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
% to fraction: divide % by 100%Example: 3% = 3%/100% = 3/100fraction to 100%: multiply the fraction by 100%Example: 3/100 =3/100 * 100% = 3%
percent off means a deduction from the regular price of something formula for getting the percent off: discounted price = regular price minus (% off multiplied by the regular price) Example: get the 25% off $100 25% off of $100 = 25% discount applied to $100 = $100 - (25% * $100) = $100 - (0.25 * $100) = $100 - $25 = $75
Formally it is a noun, but it is also used in the context of timing someone. For example, you were clocked at 11 seconds over the 100 metres. In the second usage, it is a verb.
The past participle of regular verbs is formed by (verb)+ed.Try is a regular verb. The past participle of try is tried."If only you had tried harder, I'm sure you would have scored 100%."----------------------------------------------------(See Related links below)