Main Verbs
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| Main verbs are also called
"lexical verbs". |
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Main verbs have meaning on their own (unlike
helping verbs). There
are thousands of main verbs, and we can classify them
in several ways:
Transitive and intransitive verbs
A transitive verb takes a direct object: Somebody
killed the President. An intransitive verb does
not have a direct object: He died. Many verbs,
like speak, can be transitive or intransitive.
Look at these examples:
transitive:
- I saw an elephant.
- We are watching TV.
- He speaks English.
intransitive:
- He has arrived.
- John goes to school.
- She speaks fast.
Linking verbs
A linking verb does not have much meaning in itself.
It "links" the subject to what is said about the subject.
Usually, a linking verb shows equality (=) or a change
to a different state or place (>). Linking verbs are
always intransitive (but not all intransitive verbs
are linking verbs).
- Mary is a teacher. (mary
= teacher)
- Tara is beautiful. (tara
= beautiful)
- That sounds interesting.
(that = interesting)
- The sky became dark. (the
sky > dark)
- The bread has gone bad.
(bread > bad)
Dynamic and stative verbs
Some verbs describe action. They are called "dynamic",
and can be used with continuous tenses. Other verbs
describe state (non-action, a situation). They are called
"stative", and cannot normally be used with continuous
tenses (though some of them can be used with continuous
tenses with a change in meaning).
dynamic verbs (examples):
- hit, explode, fight, run, go
stative verbs (examples):
- be
- like, love, prefer, wish
- impress, please, surprise
- hear, see, sound
- belong to, consist of, contain,
include, need
- appear, resemble, seem
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Regular and irregular verbs
This is more a question of vocabulary than of grammar.
The only real difference between regular and irregular
verbs is that they have different endings for their
past tense and past participle forms. For regular verbs,
the past tense ending and past participle ending is
always the same: -ed. For irregular verbs, the past
tense ending and the past participle ending is variable,
so it is necessary to learn them by heart.
regular verbs: base, past tense, past participle
- look, looked, looked
- work, worked, worked
irregular verbs:
base, past tense, past participle
- buy, bought, bought
- cut, cut, cut
- do, did, done
Here are lists of
regular verbs
and irregular
verbs.
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| One way to think of regular
and irregular verbs is like this:
all verbs are irregular and the
so-called regular verbs are simply one
very large group of irregular verbs. |
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Often the above divisions can be mixed. For example,
one verb could be irregular, transitive and dynamic;
another verb could be regular, transitive and stative.
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