Explore the basics of English regular verbs: how to form present and past tenses with simple, predictable patterns. Practice with examples.

Explora los conceptos básicos de los verbos regulares en inglés: cómo formar los tiempos presente y pasado con patrones simples y predecibles. Practica con ejemplos.

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Regular verbs express actions, processes, and states in a sentence while changing form in predictable ways. In English, these forms help show person, tense, aspect, and voice. Their spelling and endings are usually regular, so learners can build present, past, participle, and continuous forms by rule. For the larger system of verb behavior, compare Auxiliary Verbs, Present Simple, and Past Simple.

In the present simple, a regular verb normally keeps its base form for all subjects except third person singular. Third person singular adds -s or -es, while other subjects use the base verb. This pattern is central to everyday clauses built with Present Simple.

SubjectVerbExample
Iwalk⏰I walk and I arrive early
Youwalk🌿You walk and you stay calm
He or shewalks😊She walks and she smiles

The simple past of a regular verb is usually formed by adding -ed to the base verb. This same form also serves as the regular past participle, which connects regular verbs to perfect and passive structures. The pattern belongs to the broader system of Past Simple and Past Participles.

SubjectVerbExample
Baseworked🌙We worked and we finished late
Pastplayed😂They played and they laughed loudly
Participlecleaned✨The room was cleaned and it shone brightly

Regular past and participle endings often require spelling adjustments before -ed or -ing. Final silent -e is usually dropped before an ending, final consonants may double after a short stressed vowel, and final y usually changes to i before -ed. These patterns make the spelling look irregular at first, but the grammar remains regular and predictable.

IdeaExample
Drop final e🌱make becomes made and making keeps the base shape
Double final consonant🔊stop becomes stopped and stopping shows the same stress pattern
Change y to i✍️study becomes studied and studies keep the new spelling

Regular action verbs often form the present participle with -ing and fit easily into progressive aspect. Verbs like walk, eat, and play usually describe dynamic events, so they combine naturally with be + -ing. For form and use, see Present Participles.

SubjectVerbExample
Basewalking🌅She is walking and the sun is rising
Baseeating🔥They are eating and the soup is hot
Baseplaying🎵The children are playing and the music is loud

Dynamic verbs describe actions and events that can continue over time, so they commonly appear in progressive forms. Stative verbs describe knowledge, feelings, belief, or possession and usually avoid progressive forms, although informal speech can sometimes use them for emphasis. For a broader comparison of object patterns, see Transitive Verbs vs Intransitive Verbs.

IdeaExample
Dynamic verbs accept progressive aspect⏱️She is running and the race continues
Stative verbs usually avoid progressive aspect🧠I know the answer and I understand it clearly
Some statives appear progressive for emphasis🌟I am loving this song and it feels perfect

Transitive verbs take a direct object, while intransitive verbs do not. A verb such as eat is transitive when something is eaten, while sleep is intransitive because no object is required. These patterns matter for sentence structure and for how verbs combine with complements in English grammar.

IdeaExample
Transitive verbs take an object⚡She eats lunch and she finishes quickly
Intransitive verbs do not take an object🤫He sleeps soundly and the room stays quiet
Some verbs can be both🌳They play music and they play outside

Auxiliary verbs help regular verbs build questions, negatives, perfect forms, passive voice, and progressive aspect. Be, have, and do carry much of the grammatical work, while the main verb stays in a non finite form or in its base form. For a fuller guide, see Auxiliary Verbs.

IdeaExample
Do supports questions and negatives🚫Do you work here and we do not stop
Have supports perfect forms✅She has finished and the task is complete
Be supports progressive and passive forms🪟They are walking and the window was opened

Modal verbs such as can, must, and will express ability, necessity, and future meaning. They do not take regular endings like -s, -ed, or -ing in the same way ordinary verbs do, and they are followed by the base verb. Their behavior is different from regular verbs, but they are essential in everyday English meaning.

IdeaExample
Can shows ability🌈She can sing and she sounds confident
Must shows necessity🏃We must leave and we must hurry
Will shows future meaning⏳He will call and he will arrive soon

A phrasal verb combines a verb with a particle and the pair creates a new meaning. The particle can change the sense of the base verb and may affect whether the expression behaves like an ordinary transitive or intransitive verb. These combinations are common in spoken English and often appear with regular verb forms.

IdeaExample
Give up means stop trying🧭She gave up and she changed her plan
Look after means take care of🫶He looks after the cat and she stays healthy
Carry on means continue🌟They carried on and the show went well

Most regular verbs use predictable endings, but English also contains many irregular verbs with changed past and participle forms. Common high frequency verbs such as be, have, go, and do do not follow the regular -ed pattern, and some verbs show regional variation such as learned or learnt. Their forms belong to the system described in Irregular Verbs.

IdeaExample
Be changes heavily🔄am was been and the forms shift a lot
Have changes partly✨have had had and the pattern is distinctive
Go and do are irregular🛠️go went gone and do did done

English verbs also appear in non finite forms that do not show the full subject tense agreement of finite verbs. The infinitive uses to plus the base form, the gerund uses -ing, and the past participle often uses -ed or an irregular form. These forms are central to progressives, perfect forms, passives, and many complement structures.

IdeaExample
Infinitive⏰to work and to start now
Gerund📖working and learning every day
Past participle🌟worked and finished

English often builds tense and voice with auxiliary verbs plus non finite forms. The progressive uses be + present participle, the perfect uses have + past participle, the passive uses be + past participle, and future meaning often uses will or going to plus the base verb. These structures rely on regular verb forms even when the auxiliary carries the main grammatical meaning.

IdeaExample
Progressive form⏳is walking and the action is ongoing
Perfect form📌has worked and the result is still relevant
Passive form🌼was cleaned and the room looks fresh
Future form🧭will work and the plan is set

The most common irregular verbs appear early because they support many everyday structures. Be, have, go, and do are especially frequent, and learners encounter them in simple present, simple past, questions, negatives, perfect forms, and passives. Once these forms are familiar, regular verbs become easier to recognize because their pattern is much more predictable.

IdeaExample
Be🔗am is are was were been and it links ideas constantly
Have🎯have has had and it marks possession or completion
Go🛣️go went gone and it expresses movement clearly
Do🗣️do does did done and it supports many sentence patterns

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Last updated: Mon Jun 1, 2026, 3:45 AM