Páginas

ENGLISH. PAST SIMPLE.


PAST SIMPLE TENSE


English uses verbs in the simple past tense to refer to actions, situations, or events that are finished and that happened before now

  • There are several ways to form simple past tense in English. 
- One way is what happens with the verb BE

   It uses the special forms was and were.






- Another way is what happens with regular verbs.

(They are called regular because they all add the same ending 
--ed-- or some variation on it.)


REGULAR VERBS


Regular verbs make their past tense by adding - d
- edor 
(if the verb ends in a consonant + y), changing the to i and then adding - ed.

Examples:



Add -d: baked, cared, eased, filed, greased,
hated, liked, piled, raced, seized,
smiled, typed, wheezed, whined
Change y
to i and
add -ed:
apply / applied;
bury / buried;
cry / cried;
fry / fried;
hurry / hurried;
marry / married;
pry / pried;
spy / spied
try / tried
vary / varied
worry / worried
Add -ed: other regular verbs:
asked, belonged, clapped,
dialed, filled, guessed,
hopped, looked, marked,
needed, pulled, reached,
started, touched, viewed,
washed, yelled, zipped


Rules of the simple past tense forms:


a)Add only - d if a regular verb ends in one or more
vowels, single consonant (except x), and e. See the examples above.
b)If a regular verb ends in a single vowel and a single consonant (except x), double the consonant before you add -ed:

beg / begged

clap / clapped
fan / fanned;
hop / hopped

jog / jogged
pin / pinned
rip / ripped
tan / tanned

zip / zipped;

Compare these verbs:


hop / hopped and hope / hoped;
pin / pinned and pine / pined

file / filed and fill/filled;
like / liked and lick/licked
c)If a regular verb has two or more syllables if the
verb ends in or r, and if the last syllable is stresseddouble the or r before you add -ed:


compél / compelled;
confér / conferred;
contról / controlled;

defér / deferred;
fulfíl / fulfilled;
prefér / preferred;
propél / propelled;


If a regular verb has two or more syllables if the
verb ends in or r, and if the last syllable is not
stressed, do not double the or r before you add -ed:


cáncel / canceled;
hónor / honored;
súffer / suffered;
trável / traveled

Note that British spelling does not use this rule.
d)If a regular verb ends in a consonant and y (or if
the final syllable of a regular verb ends in this way), change the y to and then add -ed:


apply/applied;  

cry / cried;
copy / copied

fry/fried;
hurry/hurried; 

modify/modified; 
pity / pitied;  

reply / replied;
spy / spied

supply / supplied; 
try/tried;
e)enjoy/enjoyed; 
obey/obeyed; 

play/played; 
stay/stayed
f)If a regular verb ends in x, add only - ed. Do not double the x:

box / boxed


fax / faxed


mix / mixed


tax / taxed
g)Regular verbs ending in other spelling patterns usually add -ed.