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Verb Forms

Every English verb except “(to) be” has five forms,


which vary depending on whether the verb is regular
(such as “type” and “text”) or irregular (such as
“write”).

The Verb Forms


infinitive/bare form (to) type (to) text (to) write
present (-s) types texts writes
present participle (-ing) typing texting writing
past (-ed) typed texted wrote
past participle (-en) (have) typed (have) texted (have) written
Verb Forms and Tenses

Verb tense is the ability of a verb to


indicate the time at which an action
takes place.

Verb forms are the tools you’ll use


to create tenses.
Use present tense
in universally true statements not limited to a
particular time:

The Sun is ninety-three million miles from Earth.

in definitions:

Hardware is the physical system of a computer.

in statements about the content of literature


and other published works:

Hamlet appears extremely indecisive.


Use present tense
for events that are currently happening:

I am really mad at Anthony.

Andrea attends mass every week.

the distant past now/the present the distant future

am,
attends
the near past the near future
Use present infinitive
for verbs that point to the future:

I hope to complete my degree by the time we get


married.

She planned to earn an MBA by the end of the


year.

the distant past now/the present the distant future


to complete,
to earn

hope,
plan
the near past the near future
Use present perfect tense
for an action that began in the past but
continues into the present or the future:

I have lived in Pensacola all my life.

She has lived in Pensacola all her life.


the distant past now/the present the distant future

have lived

the near past the near future


Use a present participle
for an action that occurs at the same
time as the verb:

Speeding down the interstate, I saw a


police car.

the distant past now/the present the distant future

speeding + saw

the near past the near future


Use past tense
for an earlier action:

Marvin bought the car.

the distant past now/the present the distant future

bought

the near past the near future


Use past perfect tense
for an earlier action that is
mentioned after a later action:

Marvin bought the car that he had


seen advertised online.

the distant past now/the present the distant future

bought
had seen

the near past the near future


Use future tense

for an action that will be completed:


I will graduate from college.

the distant past now/the present the distant future

will graduate

the near past the near future


Use future perfect tense
for an action that will have been completed at a specific
future time in relation to another specific time:

By 2020, I will have graduated from college.

the distant past now/the present the distant future

will have graduated


2020

the near past the near future


Mood

Mood enables verbs to express how the


speaker or writer regards the sentence.

Mood can express attitudes, intentions,


commands, wishes, recommendations,
and possibilities.
Use subjunctive mood

to express a condition contrary to fact or a wish:

If I were President, I’d work with Congress to protect the


environment.

You are not the President. You’ll have to protect the


environment without the help of Congress.

The CFO would have been terminated a long time ago were
she not the CEO’s niece.

The CFO is the CEO’s niece, so she’s still hanging around.


Use subjunctive mood
to express insistence, importance, necessity, or urgency
after the word “that”:

It is important that you be on time.

We demand that the company do something about its toxic


waste.

The syllabus requires that each student write a research


paper.

Note: Use the base form of a verb (e.g. “be” instead of


“are”) because if you use the present form the problem
isn’t urgent – the person is already doing what you’ve
asked!

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