First of all BAD is an adjective not a verb. An adjective has 3 degrees of it, viz. Positive degree, Comparative degree and Superlative degree. The 3 degrees of BAD are. This list contains all the irregular verbs of the English language. Each entry includes the base or bare infinitive first, followed by the simple past (V2) form and the past participle (V3) form. Taking some time to make sentences using each irregular verb form will help you to use these verbs correctly when speaking and writing.
See the examples below: to see – see to be – be to wear – wear to go – go The root form of a verb is used to create other forms of the verb when conjugated. This is always true with regular verbs, but may not apply with irregular verbs, depending on the tense. The examples below illustrate this concept. He had eaten three hamburgers. (Root: eat) Third Person Singular Form of a Verb The third person singular (he/she/it/one) conjugation is the verb form that tends to be different from other. For regular verbs, this verb form end in ‑s (or sometimes ‑es). Consider the examples below: he sees she watches it shrinks one does Present Participle Form of a Verb The present participle verb form is created by adding -ing to the root word.
It’s used in the past, present, and future progressive. Look at the examples below.
TOEIC Grammar: Verb Tense TOEIC Grammar Guide – Verb Tense Introduction Every sentence has a subject and a main verb. Verbs describe what the subject is doing. To be able to show exactly what the subject does at any time, verbs have different forms and tenses. In order to speak and write English correctly, you must learn the various verb forms and tenses.
Learning Hint: To use verbs accurately, learn the standard verb forms and tenses. Memorize common irregular verb forms that do not follow standard forms. Verb Forms Verbs have five forms: Form Verb Example Irregular Verb Example Infinitive walk run Past tense walked ran Past participle walked run Present participle walking running - s or - es form walks runs The only verb with more than 5 forms is be Form Verb Infinitive be Past tense was (for I / he / she / it); were (for we / you / they) Past participle be, been Present participle being - s / - es form -- The verb be also has 3 present tense forms ( am, is, are) while all other verbs have one. Infinitive Form The infinitive form is the plain or dictionary form. It is used when the verb's action happens in the present and the subject is a plural noun or the pronouns I, we, you, or they: I go to work.