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Learn how some verbs change in surprising ways when we talk about things that already happened!
A long, long time ago, people started talking to each other. They made up words to tell stories about what happened yesterday or last week. Most words followed a simple rule — just add -ed to the end! But some words were extra special. They changed in their own way. These are called irregular verbs, and people have been using them for hundreds and hundreds of years.
So here's the big question: if most verbs just add -ed, how do we learn the ones that don't follow that rule? That's exactly what this lesson will help you do!
Before we jump into the tricky verbs, let's make sure we know what past tense means. When something already happened — it's done and over — we use the past tense. If you eat lunch right now, that's the present. But if you already finished, you say "I ate lunch." That's the past tense!
Let's look at a picture that shows how regular verbs and irregular verbs are different. Regular verbs follow the same path every time. Irregular verbs take a surprise turn!
See the difference? The regular verbs on top follow a straight, easy path — just add -ed. But the irregular verbs on the bottom take a wiggly path because they change in a special way. "Run" becomes ran, and "sit" becomes sat. You can't add -ed to them!
When you want to talk about something that already happened, you change the verb to the past tense. With regular verbs, you just add -ed and you're done. But with irregular verbs, the whole word changes — sometimes a lot!
Here is something really important to remember: you do NOT add -ed to irregular verbs. If you say "runned" or "goed," that sounds wrong. Instead, each irregular verb has its own special past tense form. Let's look at some of the most common ones you'll use every day.
Let's look at some common irregular verbs you use all the time:
| Present | Past |
|---|---|
| run | ran |
| sit | sat |
| hide | hid |
| tell | told |
| give | gave |
| come | came |
| say | said |
| see | saw |
| eat | ate |
| go | went |
| make | made |
| take | took |
Notice how each one changes in its own way. Some just change one letter, like sit → sat. Others change a LOT, like go → went. That's what makes them tricky — and fun!
Here's some good news! Even though irregular verbs don't follow the -ed rule, some of them change in similar ways. We can sort them into little "families." This can help you remember them better.
The Vowel Changers are a great family to learn first. Many of them switch from an "i" sound to an "a" sound — like sit → sat, run → ran, and swim → swam. See the pattern? The Big Changers are the trickiest because the whole word looks different. The Ending Changers keep part of the word the same but change the ending.
| Present (Now) | Past (Already Happened) | Family |
|---|---|---|
| sit | sat | Vowel Changer |
| run | ran | Vowel Changer |
| hide | hid | Ending Changer |
| tell | told | Ending Changer |
| go | went | Big Changer |
| see | saw | Big Changer |
| eat | ate | Big Changer |
| give | gave | Vowel Changer |
| come | came | Vowel Changer |
| say | said | Big Changer |
| make | made | Ending Changer |
| take | took | Big Changer |
Here's a sentence that uses the present tense. Let's change it to the past tense step by step.
Let's put regular and irregular verbs next to each other so you can really see how they're different. This will help you know which ones need the special past tense.
| Type | Present | Past Tense | How It Changes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regular | play | played | Add -ed ✓ |
| Regular | help | helped | Add -ed ✓ |
| Regular | call | called | Add -ed ✓ |
| Irregular | run | ran | Whole word changes |
| Irregular | tell | told | Whole word changes |
| Irregular | see | saw | Whole word changes |
See how the regular verbs all do the same thing? They just add -ed. Easy peasy! But the irregular verbs each do their own thing. There's no shortcut — you just have to learn them. The good news is that you use these words so often, you'll remember them quickly!
Right now, you're learning the past tense of irregular verbs. That's a super important step! As you get older, you'll learn even more about these tricky words. Here's a sneak peek at what's coming.
| What You Learn Now (2nd Grade) | What You'll Learn Later |
|---|---|
| go → went | go → went → gone (past participle) |
| see → saw | see → saw → seen |
| eat → ate | eat → ate → eaten |
| Simple past: "I ran." | Perfect tenses: "I have run." |
Don't worry about that right now! Just focus on learning the simple past tense forms. Once you have those down, the next steps will feel much easier. You're building a strong foundation, like building the bottom of a tower before you add more blocks on top.
Now it's your turn! Try these problems on your own. When you're ready, click the button to check your answer. You've got this!
When we talk about things that already happened, we use the past tense. Most verbs are regular — they just add -ed to the end, like "walked" or "jumped." But some of the most common verbs in English are irregular, which means they change in their own special way. For example, sit → sat, hide → hid, tell → told, go → went, run → ran, and see → saw. You cannot add -ed to these words — "sitted," "goed," and "runned" are NOT correct.
The best way to learn irregular verbs is to practice using them in sentences. Some irregular verbs change in similar ways (like sit → sat and run → ran, where the "i" changes to an "a"), and sorting them into families can help you remember them. The more you read and write, the more natural these words will feel. You already use many of them every day — and now you know why they're so special!