Download Principal Parts of Verbs

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

French grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old Irish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Navajo grammar wikipedia , lookup

Proto-Indo-European verbs wikipedia , lookup

Modern Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Lexical semantics wikipedia , lookup

Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup

Georgian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Macedonian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Chichewa tenses wikipedia , lookup

Polish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Inflection wikipedia , lookup

Old English grammar wikipedia , lookup

Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Tense–aspect–mood wikipedia , lookup

Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup

Udmurt grammar wikipedia , lookup

Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Continuous and progressive aspects wikipedia , lookup

Germanic weak verb wikipedia , lookup

Lithuanian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Grammatical tense wikipedia , lookup

Latin conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek verbs wikipedia , lookup

Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old Norse morphology wikipedia , lookup

Italian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Pluperfect wikipedia , lookup

English clause syntax wikipedia , lookup

Spanish verbs wikipedia , lookup

Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Germanic strong verb wikipedia , lookup

Basque verbs wikipedia , lookup

Finnish verb conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Ukrainian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Danish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Bulgarian verbs wikipedia , lookup

English verbs wikipedia , lookup

Kannada grammar wikipedia , lookup

Participle wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Principal Parts of
Verbs
Page 178-179
TN Standard
• SPI 0501.1.2 Identify the correct use of verbs
(i.e., action/linking, regular/irregular,
agreement, tenses) within context.
Principal Parts of Verbs
• The principal parts of a verb are forms that
help it express time and action.
• The four principal parts are called the
present, the present participle, the past, and
the past participle.
Principal Parts of Verbs
Present
Present Participle
Past
Past Participle
climb (climbs)
(is, are, was, were) climbing
climbed
(have, has, had) climbed
carry (carries)
(is, are, was, were) carrying
carried
(have, has, had) carried
live (lives)
(is, are, was, were) living
lived
(have, has, had) lived
Forming the Future Tense
• To form the future tense, use verbs from the present
column (previous slide) with will or shall.
• You can use helping verbs with participles to make other
tenses.
• For the present participle, use forms of the helping verb be
(is, are, was, were). For the past participle, use forms of
have (have, has, had).
• Examples:
She uses her pencil today. (present)
She is using her pencil again today. (present participle)
She used her pencil. (past)
She had used her pencil yesterday. (past participle)
Directions for 1-5, page 178: identify and write the
principal part (does not include the helping verb)
used in the verb or verb phrase in each sentence and
tell the kind of principal part it is. Use the chart to
help you to identify. One sentence has two verbs.
• Example: The scientist has
arrived in the tropical forest.
• Answer: arrived, past
participle
1. She pitched her
tent and looked
around.
present present participle
past
past participle
2. Now she observes
a band of spider
monkeys.
present present participle
past
past participle
3. They are jumping
from tree to tree.
present present participle
past
past participle
4. They have paused
for a snack.
present present participle
past
past participle
5. They have lived
here for many years.
present present participle
past
past participle
Directions for 6-15, page 179: identify and write the
verb phrase(includes the helping verb) and tell the
kind of principal part used in the verb. Use the chart
to help you to identify.
Some sentences have two verbs.
• Example: The zoologist had
stayed in the tropical forest.
• Answer: had stayed, past
participle
6. She prepared
for her return in
North America.
present present participle
past
past participle
7. “The animals
here have amazed
me,” she noted in
her
journal.
present present participle
past
past participle
8. She has taken
some beautiful
photographs.
present present participle
past
past participle
9. She has recorded
information in her
journal.
present present participle
past
past participle
10. “Now, a
different forest
awaits me.”
present present participle
past
past participle
11. Soon she will
sketch raccoons at
a pond.
present present participle
past
past participle
12. The zoologist
has photographed
otters.
present present participle
past
past participle
13. Three otters
are playing by the
river.
present present participle
past
past participle
14. “Have they
encountered humans
before?” she
wondered.
present present participle
past
past participle
15. Soon she will
publish a wildlife
book.
present present participle
past
past participle