Speak Spoke Spoken
[A2] Speak, Spoke, Spoken teaches English usage of the verbs speak, spoke, and spoken. Learn when to use each form and common patterns in everyday English.
Core meaning
Speak is the base verb for using your voice to communicate. It focuses on the act of talking, especially in a more formal, general, or ability sense. It does not usually emphasize a long conversation the way talk can.
Which sentence shows the core meaning of speak (using your voice in a formal or ability sense)?
Base form speak
Use speak for present time, habits, general facts, and future after will. It also appears after do and does in questions and negatives because the main verb stays in the base form. Speak is common with languages and in formal situations.
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Past spoke
Spoke is the simple past form of speak. Use it for completed actions at a specific past time. It often appears with time words like yesterday, last week, or in a clear past story sequence.
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Participle spoken
Spoken is the past participle of speak. Use it with have or has for the present perfect and with had for the past perfect. Spoken is also used in passive voice and as an adjective meaning expressed by voice rather than written.
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Perfect tenses
Perfect tenses connect a past action to a later time. With speak, they often describe experience, completed actions with relevance now, or earlier past actions. Spoken is required in all perfect forms, not spoke.
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Choose the correct sentence:
Passive voice
Use spoken in passive voice to focus on the language or message rather than the speaker. This is common for languages, rules, and general statements about communication. The structure is a form of be plus spoken.
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Which sentence is in passive voice using spoken?
Speak vs talk
Speak often sounds more formal or focused on ability, speeches, and languages. Talk is more common for casual conversation and can suggest a longer exchange. Both can mean communicate, but their typical contexts differ.
Word/Phrase | Definition | Example |
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Which sentence is more natural for a casual conversation?
Common patterns
Speak appears in frequent structures that guide meaning. Speak to focuses on addressing a person. Speak about introduces a topic. Speak up means talk louder or express an opinion more strongly.
Word/Phrase | Definition | Example |
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Pronunciation
Speak begins with an sp cluster and a long ee vowel. Spoke has a long oh vowel, and spoken has stress on the first syllable with a reduced second vowel. Clear vowel length helps distinguish the three forms in speech.
Rule | Description | Notation | Example |
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Quick recap
Use speak for present and base form contexts, spoke for simple past, and spoken for perfect tenses, passive voice, and adjective use. These three forms cover most everyday needs for describing communication and language ability. Choosing the correct form mainly depends on whether you need past time, perfect aspect, or a passive structure.
Which form correctly follows have/has?

















