Appendix:English verbs
For detailed information about English verbs, see English verbs on WikipediaWikipedia . This appendix entry provides a simple summary.
Regular verbs in English have four forms:
- The base form, for example, listen.
- The third-person singular (he/she/it) present form, for example, listens.
- The present participle (gerund), for example, listening.
- The past form, for example, listened.
Wiktionary entries display these forms in the headword line, for example:
- listen (third-person singular simple present listens, present participle listening, simple past and past participle listened)
Many irregular verbs distinguish the past tense (simple past or preterite) from the past participle. See Appendix:English irregular verbs for more information about irregular verbs.
Conjugation of regular verbs in English
[edit]English regular verbs follow one of the five rules listed in this table:
Rule | Special inflection | Example verb | Modern forms | Archaic forms |
---|---|---|---|---|
The base form ends with silent e | The -e is omitted when the suffix begins with a vowel | love | loves, loving, loved | lovest, loveth |
The base form ends with -y not preceded by a vowel | The -y becomes -ie- when the suffix begins with a consonant or -e- | cry | cries, crying, cried | criest, crieth |
The base form ends with a sibilant without silent e | An -e- is inserted if the suffix begins with a sibilant | latch | latches, latching, latched | latchest, latcheth |
The base form ends with a single vowel followed by a single consonant | The consonant is often doubled when the suffix begins with a vowel (depending on a complex set of rules) |
strut | struts, strutting, strutted | struttest, strutteth |
fathom | fathoms, fathoming, fathomed | fathomest, fathometh | ||
travel | British: travels, travelling, travelled | travellest, travelleth | ||
American: travels, traveling, traveled | travelest, traveleth | |||
The base form is not covered by these criteria | none | listen | listens, listening, listened | listenest, listeneth |
Example: walk
- Infinitive: to walk
- Present:
- Singular
- First person: I walk
- Second person: you walk (archaic thou walkest or thou walkst)
- Third person: he/she/it/one walks (archaic walketh)
- Plural
- First person: we walk
- Second person: you walk
- Third person: they walk
- Singular
- Present participle: walking (colloquial walkin' or walkin)
- Simple past: I, you, etc. walked (archaic or poetic walk'd)
- Future: I, you, etc. will walk (formal, dated, emphatic I, you, etc. shall walk)
- Note: In the first person, the form using "shall" at one time was considered the ordinary form, and the form using "will" was considered emphatic, but this distinction is now lost.
- Conditional: I, you, etc. would walk (formal, dated, emphatic I, you, etc. should walk)
- Note: In the first person, the form using "should" at one time was considered the ordinary form, and the form using "would" was considered emphatic, but this distinction is now lost.
- Past participle: walked
- Present subjunctive: I, you, etc. walk (especially in U.S. English), I, you, etc. should walk (especially in British English)
- Imperfective subjunctive: I, you, etc. walked
- Present perfect: I, you, etc. have walked
- Past perfect: I, you, etc. had walked
- Future perfect: I, you, etc. will have walked, (formal, dated, emphatic I, you, etc. shall have walked)
- Conditional perfect: I, you, etc. would have walked, (formal, dated, emphatic I, you, etc. should have walked)
- Imperative:
- First-person plural: let's walk
- Second-person: walk
- Other: let + noun or pronoun + walk
Tense and aspect
[edit]Perfect tenses
[edit]English forms the perfect tenses with a verb phrase made up of the auxiliary verb have plus the past participle of the main verb (e.g., love).
Verb | Present perfect | Past perfect | Future perfect |
---|---|---|---|
love | has/have loved | had loved | will/shall have loved |
go | has/have gone | had gone | will/shall have gone |
In addition to the regular perfect tenses, English can create other variations with various other auxiliary verbs. The verb phrase in the main clause of the first example could be called a conditional perfect tense:
- "He would have ridden his bicycle if it had not rained."
- "She was about to have gone home." (Or "She was going to have gone home.")
- "They had been going for a swim every Thursday."
Overview of tenses for the verb walk:
infinitive | walk | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
present participle | walking | ||||||||||
past participle | walked | ||||||||||
simple | progressive | perfect | perfect progressive | ||||||||
present | I walk | we walk | I am walking | we are walking | I have walked | we have walked | I have been walking | we have been walking | |||
you walk | you walk | you are walking | you are walking | you have walked | you have walked | you have been walking | you have been walking | ||||
he walks | they walk | he is walking | they are walking | he has walked | they have walked | he has been walking | they have been walking | ||||
past | I walked | we walked | I was walking | we were walking | I had walked | we had walked | I had been walking | we had been walking | |||
you walked | you walked | you were walking | you were walking | you had walked | you had walked | you had been walking | you had been walking | ||||
he walked | they walked | he was walking | they were walking | he had walked | they had walked | he had been walking | they had been walking | ||||
future | I will walk | we will walk | I will be walking | we will be walking | I will have walked | we will have walked | I will have been walking | we will have been walking | |||
you will walk | you will walk | you will be walking | you will be walking | you will have walked | you will have walked | you will have been walking | you will have been walking | ||||
he will walk | they will walk | he will be walking | they will be walking | he will have walked | they will have walked | he will have been walking | they will have been walking | ||||
conditional | I would walk | we would walk | I would be walking | we would be walking | I would have walked | we would have walked | I would have been walking | we would have been walking | |||
you would walk | you would walk | you would be walking | you would be walking | you would have walked | you would have walked | you would have been walking | you would have been walking | ||||
he would walk | they would walk | he would be walking | they would be walking | he would have walked | they would have walked | he would have been walking | they would have been walking |
Irregular verbs
[edit]For irregular verbs, see Appendix:English irregular verbs.
Auxiliaries and modal verbs
[edit]The auxiliary verb have plus a following past participle indicates the perfect aspect.
- I have walked a lot today.
The auxiliary verb be plus a following present participle indicates the continuous aspect
- I am walking right now
Modal verbs (such as can, must, would, etc.) occur only once per verb in most varieties of English. Each has a different meaning and they go before have and be, in that order.
- He must have been [past participle] walking [present participle] for ages.