Using Auxiliary Verbs
Using Auxiliary Verbs
Using Auxiliary Verbs
An auxiliary is a verb that joins with another verb to form a predicate. Auxiliary or so-called
helping verbs can be placed before main verbs to form complete verbs. In a complete verb, the
auxiliary shows tense (past or present) and person (singular or plural). The main verb shows the
action or state being described. Complete verbs are used to form questions and negatives, to
make predictions and express uncertain conditions, and to show certain time frames that
determine tense. Auxiliary or helping verbs include forms of be, have, and do and the nine
modal auxiliary verbs will, would, can, could, shall, should, may, might, and must. In
addition, the verb phrase “ought to” is often classified as a modal. The form of the main verb
depends on the auxiliary that precedes it.
The auxiliary verb “be” and its forms (am, is, are, was, were, being, and been) combine with a
present participle, a verb form ending in “-ing,” to form the progressive tenses, which express
continuing action. The present progressive expresses an action that is going on at a particular
moment: “We are going to the concert in the park.” The past progressive expresses an action
that was going on simultaneously with another action in the past: “They were eating dinner
when the phone rang.” Forms of “be” can also combine with the past participle, a verb form
ending in
“-d,” “-t” or “-n,” to form the passive voice, when the grammatical subject is the receiver of the
action.
The acceptance letter was sent on the first day of the month.
When be, being, or been is used as the auxiliary, it needs another verb in order to be complete.
Dr. Murray and Anna C. Rockowitz Writing Center, Hunter College, City University of New York
The auxiliary verb “have” and its forms (has, have, had) combine with the “-ed” or “-en” form
of a verb to show that an action began prior to the main time frame of a passage. Have and has
are used for action beginning prior to the present; had is used to show action beginning prior to a
time in the past.
By the time I entered high school, we had lived in six different cities.
A form of auxiliary verb “do” (does, do, did) followed by the base form of a verb is used to form
a question or a negative statement:
If there is already an auxiliary in a statement, use that auxiliary instead of “do” to form a
question or negative from that statement:
The auxiliary verb “do” is also used to add emphasis to a positive statement:
A modal plus the base form of a verb is used for a variety of purposes, including speaking about
a future time, making predictions, expressing uncertain conditions, or showing politeness:
Note that all modal forms may be used in present time frames:
However, only would, could, might, and should can be used in past time frames:
He said he would go. / We thought you should know. / He knew they could do it.
Dr. Murray and Anna C. Rockowitz Writing Center, Hunter College, City University of New York