Verbs and Verbals
There are separate sections on
- The Passive Voice
- Progressive, Stative, and Dynamic Verbs
and
- Conditional Verb Forms
- The "To Be" Verb
Definitions
Verbs carry the idea of being or action in the
sentence.
- I am a
student.
- The students passed
all their courses.
As we will see on this page, verbs are
classified in many ways. First, some verbs require an object to complete their meaning:
"She gave _____?" Gave what? She gave money to the church.
These verbs are called transitive. Verbs that are intransitive do
not require objects: "The building collapsed." In English, you
cannot tell the difference between a transitive and intransitive verb by its
form; you have to see how the verb is functioning within the sentence. In fact,
a verb can be both transitive and intransitive: "The monster collapsed
the building by sitting on it."
Although you will seldom hear the
term, a ditransitive verb — such as cause or give — is one
that can take a direct object and an indirect object at the same time:
"That horrid music gave me a headache." Ditransitive
verbs are slightly different, then, from factitive verbs
(see below), in that the latter take two objects.
Verbs are also classified as either finite
or non-finite. A finite verb makes an assertion or expresses a state of
being and can stand by itself as the main verb of a sentence.
- The truck demolished
the restaurant.
- The leaves were
yellow and sickly.
Non-finite verbs (think
"unfinished") cannot, by themselves, be main verbs:
- The broken
window . . .
- The wheezing
gentleman . . .
Another, more useful term for non-finite
verb is verbal. In this section, we discuss various verbal forms:
infinitives, gerunds, and participles.
For WebCT Users
The "-s"
Problem Icon means that the verb requires an -s ending because it's a
third-person (he/she/it) verb in the present tense. See the Table of Verb Tenses
for help in identifying present tenses requiring the -s.
The
"-ed" Problem Icon probably means that the verb requires an -ed ending
because it's in the past tense or that an -ed ending has been used inappropriately.
The -ed ending is particularly problematic when it occurs just before
a "d" or "t" sound as in "We are used to
doing things the way we're supposed to: like in the old-fashioned
days." See the Table
of Verb Tenses for help in identifying past tenses requiring the -ed.
The
"Verb" Problem Icon probably means that the verb tenses in this
sentence are inconsistent or incorrect. See the section on Sequencing
for help in using the correct sequence of verb tenses. See the section on Consistency
for help in maintaining a proper consistency in verb tense.
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Four Verb Forms
The
inflections (endings) of English verb forms are not difficult to remember.
There are only four basic forms. Instead of forming complex tense forms with
endings, English uses auxiliary verb forms. English does not even have a proper
ending for future forms; instead, we use auxiliaries such as "I am going
to read this afternoon." or "I will read." or even "I am
reading this book tomorrow." It would be useful, however, to learn these
four basic forms of verb construction.
Name of verb
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Base form
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Past form
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Present participle
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Past participle
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to work
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I can work.
I work. |
I worked.
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I am working.
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I have worked.
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to write
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I can write.
I write. |
I wrote.
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I am writing.
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I have written.
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Linking Verbs
A
linking verb connects a subject and its complement.
Sometimes called copulas, linking verbs are often forms of the verb to
be, but are sometimes verbs related to the five senses (look, sound,
smell, feel, taste) and sometimes verbs that somehow reflect a state of
being (appear, seem, become, grow, turn, prove, remain). What follows
the linking verb will be either a noun complement or an adjective complement:
- Those people
are all professors.
- Those
professors are brilliant.
- This room
smells bad.
- I feel great.
- A victory today
seems unlikely.
A handful of verbs that reflect a change in
state of being are sometimes called resulting copulas. They, too, link a
subject to a predicate adjective:
- His face turned
purple.
- She became
older.
- The dogs ran
wild.
- The milk has
gone sour.
- The crowd grew
ugly.
"This is he."
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A Frequently Asked
Question about linking verbs concerns the correct response when you pick up
the phone and someone asks for you. One correct response would be "This
is he [she]." The predicate following the linking verb should be in the
nominative (subject) form — definitely not "This is him." If
"This is he" sounds stuffy to you, try using "Speaking,"
instead, or "This is Fred," substituting your own name for Fred's —
unless it's a bill collector or telemarketer calling, in which case
"This is Fred" is a good response for everyone except people named
Fred.
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Active and Passive
Voice
There
is now a separate section dealing with issues raised by a verb's VOICE (active/passive).
Mood
Mood in verbs refers to one of three attitudes that a writer
or speaker has to what is being written or spoken. The indicative mood,
which describes most sentences on this page, is used to make a statement or ask
a question. The imperative mood is used when we're feeling sort of
bossish and want to give a directive, strong suggestion, or order:
- Get your
homework done before you watch television tonight.
- Please include
cash payment with your order form.
- Get out of
town!
Notice
that there is no subject in these imperative sentences. The pronoun you
(singular or plural, depending on context) is the "understood subject"
in imperative sentences. Virtually all imperative sentences, then, have a
second person (singular or plural) subject. The sole exception is the first
person construction, which includes an objective form as subject: "Let's
(or Let us) work on these things together."
The subjunctive mood is used
in dependent clauses that do the following: 1) express a wish; 2) begin with if
and express a condition that does not exist (is contrary to fact); 3) begin
with as if and as though when such clauses describe a speculation
or condition contrary to fact; and 4) begin with that and express a
demand, requirement, request, or suggestion. A new section on the uses of the Conditional should help you understand the
subjunctive.
- She wishes her
boyfriend were here.
- If Juan were
more aggressive, he'd be a better hockey player.
- We would have
passed if we had studied harder.
- He acted as if
he were guilty.
- I requested
that he be present at the hearing.
The
subjunctive is not as important a mood in English as it is in other languages,
like French and Spanish, which happen to be more subtle and discriminating in
hypothetical, doubtful, or wishful expressions. Many situations which would
require the subjunctive in other languages are satisfied by using one of
several auxiliary verbs in English.
The New York
Public Library's Writer's Guide to Style and Usage has this important
note on the subjunctive: "The words if, as if, or as though
do not always signal the subjunctive mood. If the information in such a
clause points out a condition that is or was probable or likely, the verb
should be in the indicative mood. The indicative tells the reader that the
information in the dependent clause could possibly be true" (155). Cited
with permission.
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The
present tense of the subjunctive uses only the base form of the verb.
- He demanded
that his students use two-inch margins.
- She suggested
that we be on time tomorrow.
The
past tense of the subjunctive has the same forms as the indicative except
(unfortunately) for the verb to be, which uses were regardless of
the number of the subject.
- If I were
seven feet tall, I'd be a great basketball player.
- He wishes he were
a better student.
- If you were
rich, we wouldn't be in this mess.
- If they were
faster, we could have won that race.
An excellent resource for learning more
about the subjunctive is available in the online American Heritage Book of
English Usage.
Auxiliary or Helping
Verbs
The
issues raised by Helping or Auxiliary Verbs and Modal
Auxiliaries are covered in a separate section. Click here for help with Auxiliary Verbs and Modal Auxiliaries.
Phrasal
Verbs
Phrasal verbs consist of a verb and another word or
phrase, usually a preposition. The
resulting combination creates what amounts to a new verb, whose meaning can
sometimes be puzzling to non-native speakers. Phrasal verbs often arise from
casual uses of the language and eventually work themselves into the mainstream
of language use. Phrasal verbs can be both intransitive (The children were sitting
around, doing nothing. The witness finally broke down on the stand.)
and transitive in meaning (Our boss called off the meeting. She looked
up her old boyfriend.) The word that is joined with a verb in this
construction (often a preposition) is called a particle.
The
problem with phrasal verbs is that their meaning is often, at first, obscure,
and they often mean several different things. To make out, for instance,
can mean to perceive or to see something; it can also mean to engage in light
sexual play. If someone chooses to turn up the street that is a
combination of a verb and a preposition, but it is not a phrasal verb. On the
other hand, if your neighbors unexpectedly turn up (appear) at a party
or your brother turns up his radio, those are phrasal verbs. To come
out, we are told, has eighteen different meanings.
Verbs
can be combined with different prepositions and other words, sometimes with
dizzying effect: stand out, stand up, stand in, stand off, stand by, stand
fast, stand pat, stand down, stand against, stand for. Further, the verb and
the word or phrase it connects to are not always contiguous: "Fill this
out," we would say, but then we would say, "Fill out this form."
You
can click HERE for an extensive list of phrasal verbs, broken down into categories of
transitive and intransitive, separable and inseparable. The list of verbs is
accompanied with brief definitions and examples. Printed out, the list will be
five or six pages long, depending on the size font you are using, the width of
your browser window, etc. Understand, however, that the list is a mere sampling
of the hundreds of phrasal verb combinations. For beginning language learners,
the challenge of mastering phrasal verbs is so great that only intensive
instruction and practice in an ESL program and a great deal of time spent
listening and reading carefully can address the problem. Having a good
dictionary at hand is also helpful.
Causative
Verbs
Causative verbs designate the action necessary to cause
another action to happen. In "The devil made me do it."
the verb "made" causes the "do" to happen. Here is a
brief list of causative verbs, in no particular order: let, help, allow, have,
require, allow, motivate, get, make, convince, hire, assist, encourage, permit,
employ, force. Most of them are followed by an object (noun or pronoun)
followed by an infinitive: "She allows her pet cockatiel to perch
on the windowsill. She hired a carpenter to build a new birdcage."
Three
causative verbs are exceptions to the pattern described above. Instead of being
followed by a noun/pronoun and an infinitive, the causative verbs have, make
and let are followed by a noun/pronoun and the base form of the
verb (which is actually an infinitive with the "to" left off).
- Professor Villa
had her students read four short novels in one week.
- She also made
them read five plays in one week.
- However, she let
them skip the final exam.
Factitive Verbs
Verbs
like make, choose, judge, elect, select, name. are called factitive
verbs. These transitive verbs can take two objects, or seem to:
- They judged
Philbert's dog Best of Show. (where "dog" is the direct object
and "Best of Show" is the second complement).
- The faculty
elected Dogsbreath the new Academic Dean. (where Dogsbreath is the direct
object and "Academic Dean" is the second complement).
- U.S. News and
World Report
named our college the best in the northeast. (where "our
college" is the direct object and "the best" is the second
complement).
Tenses
Tense shows the time of a verb's action or being.
There are three inflected forms reflected by changes in the endings of verbs.
The present tense indicates that something is happening or being now:
"She is a student. She drives a new car." The simple past tense
indicates that something happened in the past: "She was a student. She
drove a new car." And the past participle form is combined with
auxiliary verbs to indicate that something happened in the past prior to
another action: "She has been a student. She had driven a new car."
Unlike
most other languages, English does not have inflected forms for the future
tense. Instead, English future forms are created with the use of auxiliaries:
"She will be a student. She is going to drive a new
car." English can even create the future by using the present tense,
"The bus arrives later this afternoon," or the present
progressive, "He is relocating to Portland later next month."
For
an extensive discussion of the future tense in English, click HERE.
Progressive Verbs
The progressive tenses, which
indicate something being or happening, are formed with the present participle
form (ending in -ing) along with various auxiliaries. "She is
driving. She was driving. She will be driving. She has been driving. She had
been driving. She will have been driving." Click HERE for more on the progressive forms.
Some verbs, called stative verbs, (including, sometimes, the verb to
be) do not normally create the progressive. Click here for a discussion
of the difference between stative and
dynamic verbs.
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The Directory contains descriptions,
conjugations (for both regular and irregular
verbs), and sample sentences for the twelve tenses of active voice verbs. For a
greatly simplified one-page summary of these tenses, click HERE.
Colin Mahoney, a teacher of English as a
foreign language, has a considerable page devoted to the Present
Perfect Tense (and related issues), which we recommend. For ESL
learners and students wanting a thorough review of verbs, we also recommend
the tutorial on English tenses at Englishpage.com
(expect ads).
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Irregular Verbs
Most
verbs in English form their various tenses consistently: add -ed to the
base of a verb to create the simple past and past participle: he walked;
he has walked. There are, however, a number of so-called irregular
verbs, (including, unfortunately, some very common verbs such as to be
and to have) whose various forms must be memorized. An alphabetized list
of Common Irregular Verbs is available in
the Guide that you can copy or print out and then try to memorize or at least
use in practice sentences. You should take the quizzes on irregular verbs,
below, after you've looked at this list.
Sequence of Tenses
Sequence of Tenses:
The relationship between verbs in a main clause and verbs in dependent clauses
is important. These verb tenses don't have to be identical as long as they
reflect, logically, shifts in time and meaning: "My brother had
graduated before I started college." "My brother will
have graduated before I start." Click HERE for a chart
describing various time relationships and how those relationships determine the
appropriate sequence of verb tenses.
Verbals
Verbals
are words that seem to carry the idea of action or being but do not function as
a true verb. The are sometimes called "nonfinite" (unfinished or
incomplete) verbs. Because time is involved with all verb forms, whether finite
or nonfinite, however, following a logical Tense Sequence is important. Click HERE for a chart
describing the time elements involved in choosing the correct verbal form.
Verbals are frequently accompanied by other, related words in what is called a verbal
phrase.
There
is a whole section on how verbals connect with other words to form phrases.
Be sure to visit the always pleasant GARDEN OF PHRASES.
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Participle:
a verb form acting as an adjective. The running dog chased the fluttering
moth. A present participle (like running or fluttering) describes
a present condition; a past participle describes something that has happened:
"The completely rotted tooth finally fell out of his mouth."
The distinction can be important to the meaning of a sentence; there is a huge
difference between a confusing student and a confused student.
See the section on Adjectives for further help on
this issue.
Infinitive:
the root of a verb plus the word to. To sleep, perchance to
dream. A present infinitive describes a present condition: "I
like to sleep." The perfect infinitive describes a time earlier
than that of the verb: "I would like to have won that game."
See the section on Sequence below for other
forms as well.
Gerund:
a verb form, ending in -ing, which acts as a noun. Running in the
park after dark can be dangerous. Gerunds are frequently accompanied by other
associated words making up a gerund phrase ("running in
the park after dark").
Because gerunds and
gerund phrases are nouns, they can be used in any way that a noun can be used:
- as subject: Being king can be dangerous for your
health.
- as object of the verb: He didn't particularly like being king.
- as object of a preposition: He wrote a book about being king.
Infinitives
and Gerunds and Sequence
Although
they are not, strictly speaking, verbs, infinitives and gerunds carry within
them the idea of action. Combined with auxiliary verb forms, like verbs, they
also express various shades of time.
Simple
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Perfective
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Passive
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Perfective
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Perfective
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Actual and Potential Meanings
Although
a gerund and an infinitive will often have practically the same meaning
("Running in the park after dark can be dangerous" and "To run
in the park after dark can be dangerous"), there can be a difference in
meaning. Gerunds are used to describe an "actual, vivid, or fulfilled
action" whereas infinitives are better used to describe "potential,
hypothetical, or future events" (Frodesen & Eyring 297). This is
especially true with three kinds of verbs: verbs of emotion, verbs of completion/incompletion,
and verbs of remembering.
EMOTION
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Actual Event
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Potential Event
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I hated practicing my violin while
the other kids were playing outside.
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I prefer to work during the day.
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COMPLETION/INCOMPLETION
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Actual Event
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Potential Event
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We began working on this project
two years ago. We finished working on this project a month ago. (Finish
always takes a gerund.)
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We will continue to work on this
project for the next four months. I wonder when we will start to wrap up
this project.
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REMEMBERING
(such as remember, forget, regret) |
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Juanita forgot to do her homework.
(meaning that Juanita failed to do her homework because she didn't remember
to do it)
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Juanita forgot doing her homework.
(meaning that Juanita did her homework but that she forgot she had done so)
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