English irregular verbs
English irregular verbs are those that deviate from the standard conjugation pattern of regular verbs, which form the simple past tense and past participle by adding the suffix -ed (or -d after e) to the base form, such as walk becoming walked.[1] Instead, irregular verbs employ unique and often unpredictable forms for these tenses, requiring learners to memorize their principal parts: the base form (infinitive without to), the simple past, and the past participle.[2] Examples include go (base) → went (past) → gone (past participle) and be → was/were → been.[1] Despite comprising only a small fraction—fewer than 3%—of all verbs in modern English, irregular verbs dominate everyday usage, accounting for the ten most frequent verbs such as be, have, do, go, say, can, will, see, take, and get.[3] Estimates of their total number vary due to differences in classification, but linguistic analyses identify approximately 98 core irregular verbs in contemporary English, with broader counts reaching up to 200 when including less common or prefixed forms.[4] These verbs often lack a consistent pattern, though some exhibit vowel alternations (ablaut) like sing → sang → sung, while others use entirely suppletive forms, such as go → went.[2] Historically, most English irregular verbs trace their origins to the strong verbs of Old English (circa 450–1150 CE), which formed the past tense through internal vowel changes rather than suffixes, a process inherited from Proto-Indo-European and Proto-Germanic ablaut systems.[3] Over time, many of these—177 in Old English—have regularized due to linguistic evolution, with only 98 remaining irregular today, a trend driven by frequency: high-use verbs resist change, while rarer ones adopt regular -ed forms more readily.[4] Borrowed verbs from other languages, such as abide or strive, occasionally join this class, but native Germanic roots predominate.[2] This irregularity poses challenges for language learners but underscores the dynamic history of English morphology.Overview
Definition and characteristics
English irregular verbs are those that deviate from the standard pattern of forming the past tense and past participle by adding the suffix -ed (or -d after a final 'e') to the base form, as seen in regular verbs like walk-walked-walked. Instead, they employ alternative morphological processes, such as internal vowel alternation known as ablaut, complete replacement of the stem through suppletion, or no alteration at all (zero modification).[3] These irregularities primarily affect the past tense (preterite) and past participle forms, while the present tense and other inflections often follow more predictable patterns.[5] In modern English, there are approximately 200 to 250 irregular verbs, representing less than 3% of the total verb lexicon but encompassing nearly all of the most frequently used ones.[6] For instance, the ten most common verbs in English—such as be, have, do, go, say, can, will, see, take, and get—are all irregular.[3] This concentration ensures that irregular verbs dominate everyday language, accounting for a disproportionate share of verbal occurrences in corpora and spoken discourse, which underscores their practical utility despite their non-standard forms.[4] The morphological irregularities in English verbs can be taxonomized into several key types without delving into etymological origins. Ablaut involves systematic vowel changes within the stem to indicate tense, as in sing-sang-sung.[5] Suppletion features entirely distinct stems for different forms, exemplified by go-went-gone, where went derives from a different historical root.[3] Some verbs exhibit zero modification, retaining the base form across tenses like cut-cut-cut.[5] These mechanisms allow irregular verbs to maintain distinctiveness in high-frequency contexts, prioritizing memorization through pattern recognition over rule-based derivation.Comparison to regular verbs
Regular verbs in English, also known as weak verbs, follow a predictable conjugation pattern for forming the past tense and past participle by adding a dental suffix, typically -ed, to the base form. For example, the verb "walk" conjugates as "walk-walked-walked," where the suffix assimilates phonologically: it appears as /ɪd/ after stems ending in /t/ or /d/ (e.g., "need-needed"), /t/ after voiceless sounds (e.g., "walk" /wɔːkt/), and /d/ elsewhere (e.g., "play-played"). This system, rooted in Germanic weak verb morphology, ensures uniformity and ease of application across the vast majority of English verbs.[7] In contrast, irregular verbs deviate from this standard by employing alternative methods, most notably ablaut—internal vowel shifts—for tense marking, rendering them non-productive and morphologically complex. Strong verbs, the primary subclass of irregulars, are organized into seven ablaut classes based on patterned vowel gradations inherited from Proto-Germanic, such as Class 1's ī-ō-i sequence in "ride-rode-ridden" or Class 5's i-a-u in "give-gave-given." These shifts, combined with occasional nasal infixes or endings like -en in participles, create forms that do not rely on suffixation, leading to a closed inventory of approximately 65 surviving strong verbs from over 290 in Old English.[8][9] The productivity of regular verbs far exceeds that of irregulars, as the -ed suffix can readily extend to neologisms and borrowed words, exemplified by "google-googled" for the act of searching online. Irregular verbs form a finite, non-expanding class, with new additions being exceedingly rare; one notable exception is "snuck," an American English innovation from the late 19th century that irregularized the originally regular "sneak" (sneaked) through analogy to strong patterns like "slink." This closed nature underscores the regularization trend in English, where many historical irregulars have shifted to weak forms over time.[7][10] Phonological and orthographic variations in irregular verbs often result in dual forms, highlighting inconsistencies absent in regular conjugations. For instance, verbs like "dream" allow both regular "dreamed" and irregular "dreamt" (with a -t ending akin to archaic weak patterns), where "dreamt" predominates in British English while "dreamed" is more common in American usage. Such alternations arise from historical leveling and dialectal preferences, complicating spelling and pronunciation without the systematic rules governing regular -ed forms.[11]Historical Development
Origins in Proto-Indo-European
The irregular conjugation patterns of English strong verbs trace their roots to the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) ablaut system, a mechanism of vowel gradation that marked aspectual distinctions in verbal forms. In PIE, ablaut involved alternations among full-grade (e.g., *e), lengthened-grade, o-grade (*o), and zero-grade (absence of the vowel), often combined with reduplication to form presents, while the perfect typically featured o-grade and the aorist used e- or zero-grade. This system, inherited by the Germanic branch, repurposed ablaut for tense formation, replacing aspectual functions and leading to the vowel alternations characteristic of strong verbs like sing-sang-sung. Reduplication in PIE, which prefixed a copy of the root's initial consonant and vowel to the present stem (e.g., *kʷe-kʷel- 'turn'), coexisted with ablaut but was lost in Germanic, leaving ablaut as the dominant irregularity. English strong verbs descend directly from PIE perfective stems exhibiting these gradations, systematized in Proto-Germanic into seven classes based on root vowel patterns and consonant interactions. For instance, Class 1 verbs derive from PIE roots with *ei or *ī, evolving to Germanic *ei-i-i patterns, as in *reisan 'to ride' from PIE *h₃reydʰ- 'ride', yielding English ride-rode-ridden.[12] Suppletion in English irregular verbs arose from the early fusion of distinct PIE roots within paradigms, particularly for high-frequency verbs. The verb 'to be' exemplifies this, with present forms from PIE *h₁es- 'be' (*h₁ésmi > am, *h₁és-ti > is) and past forms from *h₁wes- 'remain, be' (*h₁wes-t > was), supplemented by influences from *bʰuH- 'become' in some aspects, creating a composite paradigm inherited through Indo-European. Comparative evidence from other Indo-European languages underscores the conservation of these PIE irregularities. The verb *bʰer- 'carry, bear' displays ablaut in Sanskrit present bharati (*bʰér-e-ti, e-grade) and reduplicated perfect bibhṛta (*bʰibʰr̥-té, zero-grade with o-influence), Gothic bairan-berun (e/o-grades), and English bear-bore-borne, illustrating the shared gradation system. Similarly, *seh₂- 'sow' shows patterns in Sanskrit sīte (lengthened e-grade), Gothic saiþan-seiþ (e/i), reflecting the original PIE ablaut that English partially retains in sow-sown.Evolution in Old and Middle English
In Old English, strong verbs formed the core of the irregular conjugation system, numbering approximately 367 strong verbs that relied on ablaut—internal vowel gradation—to indicate tense and aspect, rather than adding suffixes.[7] These verbs were organized into seven classes based on their principal parts: the infinitive, preterite singular, preterite plural, and past participle. For instance, the verb singan (to sing) conjugated as singan (infinitive), sang (preterite singular), sungon (preterite plural), and sungen (past participle), with distinct endings and vowel alternations distinguishing singular and plural forms in the preterite.[13] Vowel shifts, including i-umlaut (i-mutation), played a key role in shaping these patterns, where a following i or j caused fronting or raising of the stem vowel, as seen in class IIIb verbs like helpan (to help), which yielded healp (preterite singular) and hulpon (preterite plural).[14] The erosion of inflectional endings during late Old English, due to phonological reductions, began merging distinctions such as preterite singular and plural forms, setting the stage for further simplification. Transitioning into Middle English (c. 1100–1500), the strong verb system underwent significant simplification, with the seven Old English classes undergoing mergers in the vowel system that obscured original ablaut patterns, though the seven-class structure was largely retained. This period saw only about 208 strong verbs surviving from the Old English inventory, influenced by ongoing vowel changes and the early stages of the Great Vowel Shift, which altered pronunciations and contributed to form leveling, often favoring the preterite singular stem over the plural.[7] Scandinavian contact, particularly from Old Norse during the Viking settlements, introduced competing verbs that displaced native ones; for example, the Old Norse taka (to take) replaced the Old English strong verb niman (to take), leading to taken in Middle English.[15] Additionally, many strong verbs weakened by adopting the regular dental suffix (-ede or -de) through analogical extension, reducing the overall irregularity; notable examples include hlahan (to laugh), which shifted from a strong class VI pattern (hlāh, hlōgon) to the weak laughen/lauḥede in Middle English.[14] This weakening affected roughly a third of the surviving strong verbs, promoting greater uniformity in the verbal paradigm.Changes in Early Modern English
During the Early Modern English period (roughly 1500–1800), irregular verbs underwent significant shifts influenced by the rise of printing, which promoted uniformity in written forms, and the emergence of dictionaries and grammars that codified preferred inflections. The printing press, introduced in England in the late 15th century, facilitated the dissemination of standardized texts, particularly from London printers, reducing regional spelling and morphological variations in verb forms. By the mid-16th century, works like George Puttenham's The Arte of English Poesie (1589) advocated for London-based speech as the prestige standard, influencing irregular verb paradigms. Samuel Johnson's A Dictionary of the English Language (1755) further entrenched these norms by listing preferred forms, such as treating "learned" and "learnt" as variants of the past tense and participle of "learn," though it leaned toward regularization in some cases.[16] Dialectal variations persisted and diverged, particularly between emerging British and American English, often retaining older irregular forms in one variety while regularizing in another. For instance, the past participle of "get" as "gotten"—an older Middle English form—fell into disuse in Britain by the 18th century but was preserved in American English, reflecting colonial retention of pre-standardized patterns. Similarly, British English favored "learnt" for the past tense and participle of "learn," aligning with strong verb patterns, while American English preferred the regularized "learned," influenced by 19th-century American grammars emphasizing simplicity. These differences highlight how transatlantic separation allowed American varieties to conserve archaic irregularities absent from British standardization efforts.[17] Many irregular verbs experienced loss or regularization, shifting toward weak -ed endings, especially in less frequent or peripheral vocabulary, while core high-frequency verbs retained their strong forms through rote memorization and cultural entrenchment. Verbs like "chide," which once had the strong past "chode," fully regularized to "chided" by the 18th century, as evidenced in dictionary entries and literary usage. Others, such as "burn" and "spill," developed dual forms ("burnt"/"burned," "spilt"/"spilled"), where -t endings marked punctual aspects and -ed durative ones, though prescriptivists often promoted one over the other. High-impact verbs like "be," "go," "sing," and "write" resisted change, maintaining suppletive or ablaut patterns due to their centrality in everyday and literary discourse.[16] Prescriptivism in 18th- and 19th-century grammars reinforced these trends, enforcing "correct" irregular forms to combat dialectal deviations and promote a polished standard. Robert Lowth's A Short Introduction to English Grammar (1762) included a dedicated section on irregular verbs, advocating distinct preterite and past participle forms (e.g., "wrote"/"written" for "write") and standardizing "been" as the past participle of "be" over dialectal pronunciations like "bin" in regional or nonstandard speech. Grammarians like Lowth and later Lindley Murray (1795) viewed such enforcement as essential for social mobility and national unity, purging variants seen as vulgar while preserving irregularities in foundational verbs. This prescriptive legacy shaped modern English, balancing tradition with simplification.[18]Classification
Strong verbs
Strong verbs constitute the core category of irregular verbs in English, distinguished by their use of ablaut—a systematic internal modification of the stem vowel—to form the past tense and past participle, in contrast to the dental suffix (-ed, -d, or -t) employed by regular weak verbs.[19] This pattern reflects a direct inheritance from Proto-Germanic and Proto-Indo-European verbal systems, where vowel gradation served morphological functions without affixation.[20] In contemporary English, approximately 70 strong verbs persist from an original inventory of around 300 in Old English, with many others having shifted to weak conjugation over time due to analogical leveling and phonological changes. The conjugation of strong verbs adheres to a standard template across principal parts: the base form for the present tense (with third-person singular adding -s, as in "he swims"), the ablaut-modified form for the simple past tense, the past participle (often ending in -en or -n), and the present participle ending in -ing. Unlike some other irregular categories, strong verbs do not exhibit anomalies in the present tense stem or third-person marking. For instance, the verb "swim" follows the pattern swim (present), swam (past), swum (past participle), swimming (present participle).[7] Strong verbs are classified into seven traditional classes based on their specific ablaut series, a system largely preserved from Old English but simplified in modern usage.[21] These classes group verbs by shared vowel alternations in the principal parts, though some exhibit dialectal variations or optional weak forms. The following table summarizes the classes, their prototypical ablaut patterns (using broad phonetic notation), and representative examples:| Class | Ablaut Pattern | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | /iː/ - /əʊ/ - /ɪ/ | write - wrote - written |
| 2 | /uː/ - /əʊ/ - /əʊ/ | choose - chose - chosen |
| 3a | /ɪ/ - /æ/ - /ʌ/ (with i-mutation) | sing - sang - sung |
| 3b | /ɛ/ - /ɒ/ - /ɒ/ (with consonant cluster) | fight - fought - fought |
| 4 | /eɪ/ - /ʊ/ - /əʊ/ | take - took - taken |
| 5 | /ɪ/ - /eɪ/ - /ɪ/ | give - gave - given |
| 6 | /eɪ/ - /ʊ/ - /eɪ/ | shake - shook - shaken |
| 7 | Various (e.g., /ɔː/ - /ɛ/ - /ɔː/) | fall - fell - fallen |
Irregular weak verbs
Irregular weak verbs in English are those that form their past tense and past participle by adding a dental suffix (-d or, more commonly, -t) to the stem, similar to regular weak verbs, but deviate from the standard -ed ending through phonetic assimilation, vowel modifications, or fossilized historical forms.[24] Unlike strong verbs, which rely primarily on ablaut (vowel gradation) without a dental suffix, these verbs retain the weak conjugation frame but exhibit irregularities due to sound changes or analogical leveling. This category includes approximately 20 to 30 commonly used verbs in modern English, though broader counts of variants reach up to 56 when excluding those with additional vowel alternations.[25] Key patterns among irregular weak verbs include the use of a -t suffix instead of -ed, often resulting from devoicing or assimilation after certain consonants, as seen in verbs like send-sent and feel-felt.[24] Another pattern involves vowel shortening in the past forms, where a long vowel in the present stem reduces before the dental suffix, creating alternations such as keep-kept, leave-left, and sleep-slept. Voicing changes or suppletive-like elements also appear, for instance in bereave-bereft, where the past form reflects assimilation of the stem-final /v/ to /f/ before the suffix.[26] These deviations often allow dual forms in contemporary usage, such as dream-dreamt/dreamed or learn-learnt/learned, with the -t variant preserving older irregular patterns.[25] Historically, many irregular weak verbs trace their origins to Old English weak verb classes, particularly Class II, which featured stems with long vowels followed by the suffix -ode in the preterite, leading to forms like brōhte (from bringan, modern bring-brought).[24] In late Old English and early Middle English (around the 11th–12th centuries), phonetic processes such as the merger of -de and -te after voiced consonants (e.g., sende > sent) and trisyllabic shortening (e.g., hleapan > hleapt, modern leap-leapt) fossilized these irregularities. For verbs like sell-sold, the past form derives from an older suppletive element influenced by analogy with similar stems, rather than pure suffixation.[25] These changes were driven by phonological assimilation and high-frequency usage, preventing full regularization over time.[24] The distinction from strong verbs lies in their reliance on the dental suffix for tense marking, even amid irregularities; for example, dream-dreamt uses -t due to analogical extension from verbs like learn-learnt, contrasting with ablaut-only strong forms like sing-sang. This suffix-based irregularity often stems from Middle English sound mergers and leveling, preserving archaic features without shifting to full strong conjugation.[25]Preterite-present and modal verbs
Preterite-present verbs constitute a distinct class of irregular verbs in English, characterized by present tense forms that originate from the preterite (past tense) paradigms of strong verbs in Old English (OE).[27] These verbs, inherited from Proto-Germanic, initially conveyed meanings related to knowledge, ability, permission, or obligation, with their present indicative singular adopting the vocalism and morphology of the original preterite stem.[28] In modern English, they have largely evolved into defective modal auxiliaries, lacking infinitives, participles, and full conjugational paradigms, which restricts them to auxiliary functions without standalone use as main verbs.[29] The core examples of these verbs include can/could (from OE cunnan, 'to know, be able'), may/might (from OE magan, 'to be able, have power'), shall/should (from OE sculan, 'to owe, be obliged'), and will/would (from OE willan, 'to want', which adopted preterite-present patterns).[30] Other notable forms are must (from OE mōtan, 'to have permission or be allowed', with no distinct past) and semi-modals like dare (from OE durran) and ought (from OE āgan, 'to own').[31] Over time, these verbs underwent a historical shift from full lexical verbs capable of taking objects and adverbial modification to specialized auxiliaries that precede infinitival main verbs, losing much of their original concrete semantics in favor of abstract modal meanings.[29] Conjugationally, preterite-present modals exhibit quirks such as the absence of the third-person singular -s ending in the present tense (e.g., he can, not he cans) and past tense forms derived directly from strong preterite stems (e.g., could from the preterite of cunnan).[27] They cannot form infinitives (e.g., no to can) or participles (e.g., no canning as a gerund), rendering them defective and unsuitable for non-auxiliary roles.[32] Semantically, these verbs primarily express modality, including ability (can), permission (may), obligation (must, shall), and volition or prediction (will).[27] English has approximately nine core modal verbs of this type: can, could, may, might, must, shall, should, will, and would.[33] In American English, shall and should are notably rare compared to British English, often merging functionally with will and would for future and obligation expressions.[34]Anomalous verbs
Anomalous verbs in English are a small class of highly irregular verbs characterized by suppletion, where paradigmatic forms derive from multiple etymologically distinct roots rather than a single stem modified by predictable morphological processes.[35] This results in forms that lack phonological or morphological relatedness, setting them apart from strong verbs (which use ablaut) or irregular weak verbs (which employ stem changes without full root replacement). The phenomenon arises historically from the merger of synonymous or near-synonymous verbs in Proto-Indo-European and subsequent stages, filling gaps in defective paradigms.[36] The verb be exemplifies extreme suppletion, drawing from at least three Proto-Indo-European roots: h₁es- (yielding present forms like am and are), bʰuH- or bʰeh₂- (for infinitive be and participle been), and wes- (for past forms was and were).[37] In Old English, it combined two verbs—bēon (from bʰuH-, used for future or habitual senses) and wesan (from wes-, for present states)—leading to a modern paradigm with over eight distinct forms: am, is, are (present indicative), was, were (past indicative), were (subjunctive), be (infinitive and imperative), being (present participle), and been (past participle).[38] The present tense irregularities—am (first-person singular), is (third-person singular), and are (first- and second-person plural or second-person singular)—further highlight its uniqueness, while its role as a copula (linking subject and complement) extends to subjunctive uses like were for counterfactuals across all persons (e.g., If I were rich).[35] Other key anomalous verbs include have and do, which exhibit milder suppletion but still deviate sharply from regular patterns. Have uses had for both past tense and participle, derived from an Old English form hæfde that traces to a distinct stem within the same Proto-Indo-European root kap- ("to grasp" or "hold"), creating an unpredictable shift.[35] Similarly, do employs did (past) and done (participle), with did stemming from Proto-Indo-European dʰed- (a causative or iterative form) while do and done derive from dʰeh₁- ("to put" or "place").[35] Do functions prominently as a pro-verb in emphatic constructions, questions, and negations (do-support), such as Do you like it? or I do not agree, bypassing typical auxiliary rules.[36] Only three to five verbs qualify as truly anomalous in contemporary English—primarily be, have, and do, with occasional inclusion of go (suppletive past went from wend-)—due to their resistance to regularization.[35] Their retention persists because of exceptionally high token frequency; be ranks as the most common verb in English corpora, ensuring these forms remain entrenched despite analogical pressures toward regularity.[36]Special Patterns
Irregular present tenses
English irregular verbs exhibit non-standard forms in the present tense, primarily through suppletion—where different roots supply forms for different persons—and the absence of the third-person singular -s inflection typical of regular verbs. Suppletive patterns arise when unrelated stems are used across persons, creating unpredictable paradigms that must be memorized. This irregularity affects a small but functionally significant set of verbs, roughly 10 to 12 in modern English, often those serving as auxiliaries.[39][27] The verb be exemplifies suppletive presents, drawing from multiple historical roots: am (first person singular) from Proto-Germanic esmi, is (third person singular) from esti, and are (plural and second person singular) from aront. This results in forms like I am, you are, he/she/it is, and we/they are, diverging sharply from regular patterns like walk/walks. In contrast, have and do show irregular but non-suppletive third-person singulars as has and does, respectively, without the expected /v/ or long vowel retention; these stem from Old English strong verb presents, where dōn (do) had forms like dēþ (third singular) and hafan (have) had hæfþ.[40] Preterite-present verbs, a legacy of Germanic strong verbs whose present tenses repurposed old past stems, further illustrate irregularity by omitting the -s ending entirely and often lacking infinitives or participles. Examples include modals like can, may, shall, and will, which conjugate uniformly across persons (e.g., he can swims, not cans) due to their historical preterite origins, such as Old English cunnan (can) with present cann and past cūþe. This class encompasses about nine verbs, including must and ought, preserving ablaut patterns over affixation.[27] These irregularities play a key functional role in English, as affected verbs like do, have, and be form the backbone of questions, negations, and emphatics (e.g., doesn't like, hasn't eaten, isn't running), where standard -s or person agreement would disrupt auxiliary structures. In African American Vernacular English (AAVE), the verb be takes an invariant, uninflected form to mark habitual or repeated actions, as in "She be working" (meaning she habitually works), contrasting with non-habitual "She working" and highlighting dialect-specific present tense innovations.[41]Coincident forms
Coincident forms refer to patterns in English irregular verbs where two or more principal parts—the base form (infinitive/present), past tense, and past participle—are phonologically and orthographically identical. In irregular verbs, this coincidence often occurs without the -ed suffix, unlike regular verbs which use -ed for identical past and past participle forms. This coincidence simplifies the paradigm by reducing the number of distinct forms to memorize, though it can introduce ambiguities in usage due to homophony or identical spelling across tenses. Such patterns are prevalent among strong verbs and certain irregular weak verbs, contrasting with verbs like take–took–taken that maintain three distinct parts across classes derived from Proto-Indo-European ablaut series.[42] The most common type involves the past tense and past participle being identical, while differing from the base form; examples include buy–bought–bought, bring–brought–brought (an irregular weak verb with a -t suffix), and meet–met–met. Another type features the base form identical to the past tense, often extending to the past participle as well, such as cut–cut–cut and put–put–put. A rarer subset has all three principal parts the same, like bid–bid–bid and hit–hit–hit, where no morphological change occurs across tenses. These types encompass dozens of verbs, primarily from strong verb classes 3B, 5, and 6, as well as miscellaneous irregulars.[43][42] Historically, these coincidences arose during the transition from Old English to Middle English through the erosion of inflectional endings on verb forms, caused by phonological reductions and language contact with Norse and French. In Old English strong verbs, distinct preterite plural and past participle forms often shared similar stems but differed in endings (e.g., sangon 'they sang' and sungen 'sung'); the loss of unstressed vowels and final syllables merged these into a single form like sung by Middle English, leveling the paradigm. This simplification reduced the original four principal parts of Old English strong verbs to three in Modern English, promoting coincidences in irregular survivals while regular verbs analogized to a uniform -ed ending.[44][42] While coincident forms ease acquisition by minimizing unique memorization (e.g., only two forms needed for buy–bought–bought), they complicate usage through potential homophones, as seen in read (base /riːd/ vs. past/past participle /rɛd/), requiring contextual or prosodic cues for disambiguation. In prefixed verbs, such patterns can extend analogically, but base form coincidences remain the core irregularity.[2]Prefixed and compound verbs
English prefixed verbs frequently inherit the morphological patterns of their base verbs, including any irregularities in past tense and past participle formation. For instance, the verb forgo conjugates as forwent and forgone, mirroring the strong ablaut pattern of its base go (went, gone). Similarly, undo follows undid and undone, retaining the irregularity of do (did, done). This retention traces back to Old English, where prefixes such as be-, for-, and ge- were commonly attached to verbs, preserving the base's strong or weak conjugation class without altering its core inflectional behavior.[45][46] Among modern English irregular verbs, approximately 30 are formed by prefixation, deriving their forms directly from irregular bases. Examples include beget (begot, begotten) from get (got, gotten), and arise (arose, arisen) from rise (rose, risen). Some prefixed verbs adopt irregular weak patterns, such as understand (understood, understood), which parallels the base stand (stood, stood) by using a vowel change plus dental suffix rather than the regular -ed ending. These derivations do not introduce novel irregularities but extend existing ones through prefixation.[47] Compound and phrasal verbs typically conjugate according to the irregularity of their main verb component. For example, the phrasal verb give up forms gave up and given up, inheriting the strong pattern from give. In rare cases, compounding can lead to innovative irregular forms in dialects, such as sneak developing snuck as a past tense in American English, occasionally extending to phrasal uses like sneak up. Variability appears in some forms, as with foretell standardly using foretold but occasionally showing dialectal alternations influenced by regional pronunciation. Prefixes and compounding alone do not generate new irregularities; they propagate or rarely adapt those of the base verb.[48][49]Lists and Examples
Strong verbs by ablaut class
Strong verbs in English are classified into seven traditional ablaut classes based on vowel gradation patterns inherited from Proto-Germanic and Old English, where tense is indicated by internal vowel changes rather than suffixes alone.[50] These classes organize approximately 68 verbs that remain irregular in modern English, with inclusion typically limited to those appearing at a frequency greater than 1 per million words in large corpora like the British National Corpus.[51][52] The principal parts include the present tense form, past tense (historically distinct in singular and plural forms in Old English, though merged in modern English), and past participle; some classes show dialectal or alternative forms due to ongoing regularization.[53] The following table summarizes the seven classes, their characteristic ablaut patterns (using representative vowel shifts), historical notes on past plural forms (which often differed from the singular in Old English but are obsolete in modern usage), and selected examples with principal parts. Examples are representative, focusing on common verbs; obsolete forms like chide (chide-chid-chidden) are noted separately as they no longer function as fully strong in contemporary English.[50][7]| Class | Ablaut Pattern (Present - Past - Past Participle) | Historical Past Plural Note | Examples (Principal Parts: Present - Past - Past Participle) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ī > ō > i (high front to back rounded to short front) | Often featured a short i-vowel, distinct from singular's long a (e.g., rīdan - rād - rīdon - riden) | abide (abide - abode - abided/abode); ride (ride - rode - ridden); arise (arise - arose - arisen)[53] |
| 2 | ēo > ēa > o (diphthong to long front to short back) | Used a u-vowel form, differing from singular (e.g., ceōsan - ceās - curon - coren) | choose (choose - chose - chosen); fly (fly - flew - flown); freeze (freeze - froze - frozen)[50] |
| 3 | Short i/e > a > u (short front to low to back rounded) | Featured u-grade, separate from singular (e.g., singan - sang - sungon - sungen) | sing (sing - sang - sung); drink (drink - drank - drunk); swim (swim - swam - swum)[51] |
| 4 | ē > ǣ > o (long front to low front to short back) | Matched singular in some, but often with o-grade extension (e.g., stelan - stæl - stǣlon - st olen) | come (come - came - come); steal (steal - stole - stolen); tear (tear - tore - torn)[50] |
| 5 | ē > ǣ > ē (long front to low front to long front) | Aligned closely with singular (e.g., sprecan - spræc - spræcon - sprecen) | give (give - gave - given); speak (speak - spoke - spoken); bear (bear - bore - borne/born)[53] |
| 6 | a > ō > a (short low to long back to short low) | Used a-vowel or o-extension, distinct in some (e.g., faran - fōr - fōron - faren) | shake (shake - shook - shaken); stand (stand - stood - stood); take (take - took - taken)[50] |
| 7 | Varied (often a/e > ō/ē > a/e, with reduplication historically) | Generally matched singular with -d- extension (e.g., healdan - heold - heoldon - healden) | fall (fall - fell - fallen); hold (hold - held - held); mow (mow - mowed - mown)[51] |
Other irregular verbs
English irregular verbs encompass several categories beyond strong verbs, including irregular weak verbs, preterite-present and modal verbs, anomalous verbs, and those with coincident forms across tenses. Irregular weak verbs typically form their past tense and past participle using a dental suffix (-d or -t) but often involve vowel shortening or other deviations from the standard -ed pattern, as seen in verbs like build-built-built. Preterite-present verbs, which originated from Old English strong preterites repurposed for present meanings, evolved into modern modals such as can-could.[55] Anomalous verbs like be, have, and do exhibit highly irregular conjugations across all principal parts due to their auxiliary functions and historical anomalies.[56] Verbs with coincident forms maintain identical base, past, and past participle, such as cut-cut-cut, simplifying conjugation but marking them as irregular. These categories collectively account for approximately 150 irregular verbs, excluding pure strong types, and are alphabetized below for clarity.[57] Variants exist across dialects; for instance, British English often prefers learnt and burnt as past participles, while American English favors learned and burned, though both are acceptable.[49] Rare forms include pled as an alternative past for plead in legal contexts. Prefixed verbs may inherit irregularities from their base forms, as in foretell-foretold-foretold, but full listings are omitted here to focus on unprefixed examples.[57]Irregular Weak Verbs
These verbs use a dental suffix for past forms but show irregularities like stem vowel changes or alternative endings. Representative examples, alphabetized:| Base Form | Past Simple | Past Participle |
|---|---|---|
| bend | bent | bent |
| build | built | built |
| buy | bought | bought |
| catch | caught | caught |
| creep | crept | crept |
| dwell | dwelt/dwelled | dwelt/dwelled |
| feel | felt | felt |
| flee | fled | fled |
| have | had | had |
| hear | heard | heard |
| keep | kept | kept |
| kneel | knelt/kneeled | knelt/kneeled |
| leave | left | left |
| lend | lent | lent |
| lose | lost | lost |
| make | made | made |
| mean | meant | meant |
| pay | paid | paid |
| say | said | said |
| seek | sought | sought |
| sell | sold | sold |
| send | sent | sent |
| sleep | slept | slept |
| spend | spent | spent |
| sweep | swept | swept |
| teach | taught | taught |
| tell | told | told |
| think | thought | thought |
Preterite-Present and Modal Verbs
These defective verbs lack full infinitive or participle forms and express modality; their past tenses often derive from preterite stems. Alphabetized examples:| Base Form | Past Simple |
|---|---|
| can | could |
| dare | dared/durst |
| may | might |
| must | (no past; had to) |
| need | needed/need |
| ought to | (no past) |
| shall | should |
| will | would |
Anomalous Verbs
These core auxiliaries have unique, suppletive forms across tenses. Examples:| Base Form | Past Simple | Past Participle |
|---|---|---|
| be | was/were | been |
| do | did | done |
Verbs with Coincident Forms
These maintain the same form for base, past, and past participle. Alphabetized representative examples:| Base Form | Past Simple | Past Participle |
|---|---|---|
| bet | bet | bet |
| bid | bid/bade | bid/bidden |
| broadcast | broadcast | broadcast |
| burst | burst | burst |
| cast | cast | cast |
| cost | cost | cost |
| cut | cut | cut |
| fit | fit/fitted | fit/fitted |
| hit | hit | hit |
| hurt | hurt | hurt |
| let | let | let |
| put | put | put |
| quit | quit | quit |
| rid | rid | rid |
| set | set | set |
| shed | shed | shed |
| shut | shut | shut |
| slit | slit | slit |
| split | split | split |
| spread | spread | spread |
| wet | wet/wetted | wet/wetted |