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Gs Past Simple - Regular Verbs

Sophie is helping her friend Yu Quan understand how to use the past simple tense in English. She explains that the past simple is used to talk about finished past events and states. She discusses how regular verbs are formed by adding "-ed" to the infinitive and the spelling rules for irregular verbs. Sophie also covers how to form questions and negatives in the past simple tense before noting that Yu Quan needs to learn irregular past verb forms as well.

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Su Özdemir
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50% found this document useful (2 votes)
599 views3 pages

Gs Past Simple - Regular Verbs

Sophie is helping her friend Yu Quan understand how to use the past simple tense in English. She explains that the past simple is used to talk about finished past events and states. She discusses how regular verbs are formed by adding "-ed" to the infinitive and the spelling rules for irregular verbs. Sophie also covers how to form questions and negatives in the past simple tense before noting that Yu Quan needs to learn irregular past verb forms as well.

Uploaded by

Su Özdemir
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Grammar snacks: The past simple regular verbs

Remember to watch the video first! Then read the conversation between Sophie and Yu Quan, an exchange student from China she met when she visited the USA. Sophie is helping Yu Quan understand the past simple.

The past simple is the most common way of talking about past events or states which have finished. It is often used with past time references (e.g. yesterday, two years ago).

Please explain past events or states!

Yu Quan
A past event could be one thing that happened in the past, or a repeated thing. I stopped at a zebra crossing. We carried on with the test. We played tennis every day in August. A state is a situation without an action happening. We stayed at my grandparents' house last summer.

Sophie

How do you form the past simple?

Regular past simple forms are formed by adding ed to the infinitive of the verb. start started kill killed jump jumped

That seems easy!

Yes, but there are some spelling rules. If a verb ends in e, you add d. agree agreed like liked escape escaped

If a verb ends in a vowel and a consonant, the consonant is usually doubled before ed. stop stopped plan planned If a verb ends in consonant and y, you take off the y and add ied. try tried carry carried But if the word ends in a vowel and y, you add ed. play played enjoy enjoyed

OK, not quite so easy! But the past simple form doesn't change at all for I, you, he, she, we and they, does it?

No, the form doesn't change. See, it is easy!

What about the pronunciation of the ed ending?

There are three kinds of pronunciation /d/ /t/, and /d/. Look at the table below.

/d/
arrived failed agreed asked crossed stopped

/t/
wanted decided started

/ d/

Aaagh! How do I know how to pronounce each one?

Good question. Well, really all you need to know is that /d/ is easier to say after arrive, and /t/ is easier to say after ask. For /d/, the infinitive ends in a /d/ or a /t/ sound already so you must add an extra syllable for these verbs.

All right, that makes sense, but how do you form questions and negatives?

With the verb did (do in the past) + the infinitive. Did you pass? You didn't fail, did you? Yes, I did. / No, I didn't.

Right, thanks, I've got it now!

Good. But you also need to learn the irregular past simple forms.

You mean there are verbs that don't end in ed in the past?

Yes, they don't all end in ed. Have a look at the past simple irregular verbs too.

Watch the video here:

http://bit.ly/LN0VwO

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