Language Arts OverviewWhen you write and speak, you must use verbs in the correct tense. The verb's tense tells the reader when the action happened. There are four principal parts of verbs: the base form (talk), the present participle form (auxiliary verb + talking), the past form (talked), and the past participle form (auxiliary verb + talked). For regular verbs, you form the past and past participle by adding -ed to the base form, but you must memorize the irregular forms as they are unpredictable. The principal parts are used to form six different tenses:
Progressive verb forms convey a continuing action, which you can create by adding the appropriate tense of be with the present participle of the main verb. For example, "We are talking in the garden." Are talking is the present progressive form. The present and past tenses have emphatic forms, which add emphasis to the verb. The emphatic form uses do, does, or did with the base form of the main verb. For example, "We do talk in the garden." Do talk is the present emphatic form. The active voice, which tends to be more engaging, uses active verbs. The active voice indicates that the subject performed the action of the sentence: "My grandmother shoveled soil." The passive voice arranges the sentence so that the action is performed on the subject: "The soil was shoveled by my grandmother." Sometimes the passive voice is necessary, like when it is unclear who or what has performed an action: "The soil was soaked." When choosing a verb tense, remember to keep statements of universal truths in the present tense, even if the main verb is in past tense. "My grandmother proved that gardening is hard work." Also, do not shift or change verb tenses when two or more events occur at the same time. Shift tenses only if you want to show your audience that one event precedes or follows another. Log InThe resource you requested requires you to enter a username and password below: | ||