34 thoughts on “ Irregular Past Tense Verbs – word lists, worksheets, activities, goals, and more ” Dawn Wolf Thursday at 5:35 pm. I absolutely LOVE your website! It has saved me countless hours. The language units and the activities are great, as well as the numerous ways you have referenced and linked to the pages. Regular past simple verbs are those that add either a -d or -ed to the present tense form to create the past tense form. The children skipped past the door. We walked along the beach. The Simple Present Verb Tense is a timeless truth, something that is happening all the time, actions that we do all the time, The present tense verbs tells about activities that we do again and again.: We use the Present Progressive Verb Tense to talk about actions that are in progress right now at the moment of speaking. They are activities that are continuing.
Take/takes, seem/seems, look/looks). Verbs that end with a vowel other than e add - es (e.g. Go/goes, veto/vetoes, do/does). Verbs that end with -s, - z, -ch, - sh, and -x add -es (e.g.
Kiss/kisses, fizz/fizzes, punch/punches, wash/washes, mix/mixes). If the verb ends in a consonant plus - y, change the y to an i before adding - es (e.g. Hurry/hurries, clarify/clarifies).
But if the verb ends in a vowel plus -y, just add -s (e.g. Play/plays, enjoy/enjoys). Past tense formation Forming the tense of regular verbs is mostly straightforward, and you use the same form for the first, second, and third persons, singular and plural: If the basic form of the verb ends in a consonant or a vowel other than e, add the letters - ed to the end (e.g. Seem/seemed, laugh/laughed, look/looked).