John Cabot Sailed To America in 1498. My Father Died Last Year. He Lived in Fiji in 1976. We Crossed The Channel Yesterday
John Cabot Sailed To America in 1498. My Father Died Last Year. He Lived in Fiji in 1976. We Crossed The Channel Yesterday
John Cabot Sailed To America in 1498. My Father Died Last Year. He Lived in Fiji in 1976. We Crossed The Channel Yesterday
EXAMPLES
Subject + verb + ed
I skipped.
Negative
Interrogative
Interrogative negative
Be Have D
I was had d
We were had d
AFFIRMATIVE
The affirmative of the simple past tense is simple.
EXAMPLES
TO GO
TO GIVE
TO COME
The simple past is used to describe an action that occurred and was completed in the past. The simple past is formed by
Read lesson
adding –ed to the base form of the verb (the infinitive without to).
* en
+ ed
español
=
* en
français simple
past
base
form
walk walked
push pushed
greet greeted
watch watched
In English, the simple past of regular verbs is extremely easy. It is the same for all persons. Here are example sentences
of the simple past with the verb WORK.
singular plural
There are several irregularities regarding orthography (spelling) for the simple past ending of regular verbs. Similarly,
there are different ways to pronounce this ending. See the lesson on pronunciation of the Simple Past – ed ending to
learn more.
For regular verbs ending in the vowel -e, add –d.
base simple
form past
hate hated
seize seized
hope hoped
assum
assumed
e
tie tied
free freed
For the very few English verbs that end in a vowel other than -e, add –ed.
base
simple
for
past
m
ski skied
echo echoed
play played
decay decayed
surve
surveyed
y
enjoy enjoyed
Exceptions: The verbs SAY and BUY are irregular: See below.
cry cried
dirty dirtied
magnify magnified
For regular verbs ending in a consonant + vowel + consonant, double the final consonant before adding -ed.
base simple
for past
m
dam dammed
beg begged
plan planned
strip stripped
In American English, when the regular verb has more than one syllable and the syllable stress is on the final syllable, the
final consonant is doubled.
base simple incorrect
form past
In these verbs, the syllable stress is not on the final syllable so the consonant is not doubled.
base simple incorrect
form past
Here are examples with regular verbs in the simple present and the simple past.
simple present simple past
buy bought
do did
fly flew
forget forgot
light lit
go went
say said
You will learn the spelling of the simple past form (-ed form.) But before you continue the lesson study the following
examples and try to see how the verbs are spelled.
Verbs ending in a...
1. silent e 2. vowel + y 3. consonant + y 4. other forms
close = closed marry = married visit = visited
die = died play = played carry = carried miss = missed
phone = phoned destroy = destroyed study = studied watch = watched
show = showed finish = finished
fix = fixed
buzz = buzzed
The rules of the simple past tense forms:
1. Regular verbs ending in a silent e take /-d/ in the simple past and past participle:
Example:
close=closed
2. Regular verbs ending in a vowel + y take /-ed/ in the simple past and past participle:
Example:
play=played
3. Regular verbs ending in a consonant + y take /-ied/ in the simple past and past participle (the y becomes
an i followed by /-ed/)
Example:
marry=married
4. All the other regular vebs take /-ed/ in the simple past and past participle.
Example:
visit=visited
Special cases of the -ed forms:
Follow these rules when there is a consonant after a vowel (stop, ban, open, offer...)
If there is a consonant after a stressed vowel at the end of the word, double the consonant
stop – stopped
ban - banned
swap - swapped
If the vowel is not stressed, we do not double it:
open - opened (Here the stress is on'o', not the 'e'.)
offer - offered ( Here the stress is on 'o', not the 'e'.)
In British English we double the last l even though the last vowel is not stressed. Here are some examples:
travel - travelled
cancel - cancelled
level - levelled
marvel – marveled
The simple past tense is one of the most common tenses in English. Its form is the same with all subjects. It is usually
formed by adding -ED to the verb. This page will explain the rules for forming the tense with regular verbs.
1. Forming the simple past tense
With most verbs, the simple past is created simply by adding -ED. However, with some verbs, you need to add -D or
change the ending a little. Here are the rules:
live lived
e Add -D
date dated
try tried
Consonant +y Change y to i, then add -ED
cry cried
boil boiled
fill filled
anything else including w Add -ED
hand handed
show showed
When you are sure that you understand the lesson, you can continue with the exercises.
The past simple – regular verbs
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).
A past event could be one thing that happened in the past, or a repeated thing.
Regular past simple forms are formed by adding -ed to the infinitive of the verb.
start → started
kill → killed
jump → jumped
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?
There are three kinds of pronunciation: /d/, /t/ and /ɪd/. Look at the table below.
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 /ɪd/, 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?
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.
You have to know all forms of irregular verbs very well. For the Simple Past you need the form of the verb which can be
found in the 2nd column of the table of irregular verbs.
go → went → gone
1. Adding -ed
1.1. consonant after a short, stressed vowel at the end of the word
Double the consonant.
stop – stopped
swap – swapped
Only add -d.
love – loved
save – saved
1.3. verbs ending in -y
How to Pronounce -ed
The past simple tense and past participle of all regular verbs end in -ed. For example:
work, worked, worked
In addition, many adjectives are made from the past participle and so end in -ed. For example:
I like painted furniture.
/ɪd/
/t/
/d/
If the base verb ends in one of example base example pronounce the - extra
these sounds verb* with -ed ed as syllable?
allow allowed
beg begged
*Note that it is the sound that is important, not the letter or spelling. For example, fax ends in the letter x but the
sound /s/; like ends in the letter e but the sound /k/.
Exceptions
aged
dogged
ragged
blessed
learned
wicked
crooked
naked
wretched
So we say:
an aged man /ɪd/
a blessed nuisance /ɪd/
a dogged persistence /ɪd/
a learned professor - the professor, who was truly learned /ɪd/
a wretched beggar - the beggar was wretched /ɪd/
But when used as real verbs (past simple and past participle), the normal rules apply and we say:
he aged quickly /d/
he blessed me /t/
they dogged him /d/
he has learned well /d/ or /t/