Verbs in English Grammar: A Detailed Module with Examples & Exercises

Here is a detailed module on the Verb in English grammar, structured consistently with the previous modules on nouns, pronouns, and adjectives. It includes learning objectives, core content breakdown, types of verbs, tenses, subject-verb agreement, verbals, common errors, and practice exercises.


Module: The Verb in English Grammar

Learning Objectives

By the end of this module, you will be able to:

  1. Define a verb and explain its function as the heart of the predicate.
  2. Distinguish between action verbs, linking verbs, and helping verbs.
  3. Identify and correctly use transitive and intransitive verbs.
  4. Conjugate verbs correctly across all tenses (present, past, future, perfect, progressive).
  5. Apply subject-verb agreement rules accurately.
  6. Understand and use verbals (infinitives, gerunds, participles).
  7. Avoid common verb errors such as tense shifting, irregular verb mistakes, and subject-verb disagreement.

Section 1: What is a Verb?

A verb is a word that expresses an action, an occurrence, or a state of being. Every complete sentence in English must have at least one verb.

Function: The verb forms the heart of the predicate and tells us what the subject does, what happens to the subject, or what state the subject is in.

Examples:

  • She runs every morning. (action)
  • The accident happened quickly. (occurrence)
  • I am tired. (state of being)

Section 2: Types of Verbs

2.1 Action Verbs

Action verbs express a physical or mental action. They answer the question What is the subject doing?

TypeExamples
Physical actionrun, jump, eat, write, build, drive, swim
Mental actionthink, believe, remember, consider, understand, want

Examples:

  • The dog barks loudly. (physical)
  • She believes in ghosts. (mental)

2.2 Linking Verbs

Linking verbs connect the subject to a subject complement (a noun, pronoun, or adjective that describes or identifies the subject). They do not express action.

Common linking verbs:

VerbExample
to be (am, is, are, was, were, be, being, been)She is a doctor.
becomeHe became angry.
seemThe task seems easy.
appearThey appear happy.
feelI feel cold.
lookYou look tired.
smellThe flower smells sweet.
tasteThe soup tastes delicious.
soundThat sounds interesting.
remainShe remained silent.
stayThe weather stayed warm.

Test for linking verb: Replace the verb with a form of to be (am, is, are, was, were). If the sentence still makes sense, it is likely a linking verb.

  • The soup tastes goodThe soup is good (makes sense → linking)
  • She tastes the soupShe is the soup (does not make sense → action verb)

2.3 Helping Verbs (Auxiliary Verbs)

Helping verbs assist the main verb to form different tenses, moods, or voices. They cannot stand alone as the main verb in a sentence (except to be when used as a linking verb).

Primary helping verbs:

VerbForms
beam, is, are, was, were, being, been
havehave, has, had, having
dodo, does, did

Modal helping verbs (express possibility, necessity, permission, etc.):

ModalMeaning/UseExample
canability, permissionI can swim.
couldpast ability, polite requestShe could run fast.
maypermission, possibilityYou may leave.
mightweaker possibilityIt might rain.
mustnecessity, strong obligationYou must stop.
shallfuture (formal, 1st person)I shall return.
shouldadvice, obligationYou should study.
willfuture, intentionThey will arrive soon.
wouldpast habit, polite request, conditionalHe would call every day.
ought tomoral obligationWe ought to help.

Example of helping verb + main verb:

  • She is (helping) running (main) in the park.
  • They have (helping) finished (main) their homework.
  • I will (helping) go (main) tomorrow.

Verb phrase: A main verb plus one or more helping verbs. could have been waiting → 3 helping verbs + 1 main verb.


Section 3: Transitive vs. Intransitive Verbs

3.1 Transitive Verbs

A transitive verb requires a direct object to complete its meaning. The action is transferred from the subject to the object.

VerbDirect ObjectComplete Sentence
carrybagShe carries the bag.
hitballHe hit the ball.
loveyouI love you.
eatappleThe child ate an apple.

Question to ask: Verb + what? or Verb + whom? If you can answer, the verb is transitive.

3.2 Intransitive Verbs

An intransitive verb does not require a direct object. The action is complete without transferring to an object.

VerbComplete Sentence
sleepThe baby sleeps.
arriveThe train arrived.
laughEveryone laughed.
sitPlease sit here.

Note: Many verbs can be both transitive and intransitive depending on usage.

  • She sings. (intransitive – no object)
  • She sings a song. (transitive – a song is the object)

3.3 Ditransitive Verbs

Some verbs take two objects: a direct object (what is given) and an indirect object (to whom/for whom).

VerbIndirect ObjectDirect ObjectSentence
givemea bookShe gave me a book.
tellusa storyHe told us a story.
sendherflowersThey sent her flowers.

Alternative structure: She gave a book to me. (here to me is a prepositional phrase, not an indirect object)


Section 4: Verb Tenses

English has 12 major tenses, formed by combining time (past, present, future) with aspect (simple, progressive, perfect, perfect progressive).

4.1 Present Tenses

TenseFormulaExampleUse
Simple Presentbase verb (add -s for 3rd person singular)She works.facts, habits, general truths
Present Progressiveam/is/are + present participle (-ing)She is working.action happening now, temporary situation
Present Perfecthave/has + past participleShe has worked.past action with present relevance, experience
Present Perfect Progressivehave/has + been + -ingShe has been working.ongoing action from past to present

4.2 Past Tenses

TenseFormulaExampleUse
Simple Pastpast form (regular -ed / irregular)She worked.completed past action
Past Progressivewas/were + -ingShe was working.action in progress at a past time
Past Perfecthad + past participleShe had worked.action completed before another past action
Past Perfect Progressivehad + been + -ingShe had been working.ongoing action before another past action

4.3 Future Tenses

TenseFormulaExampleUse
Simple Futurewill + base verbShe will work.prediction, promise, future fact
Future Progressivewill + be + -ingShe will be working.action in progress at a future time
Future Perfectwill + have + past participleShe will have worked.action completed before a future time
Future Perfect Progressivewill + have + been + -ingShe will have been working.ongoing action up to a future point

4.4 Conjugation Example: to walk (regular)

TenseSingularPlural
Simple PresentI walk, you walk, he/she/it walkswe walk, you walk, they walk
Simple PastI walkedwe walked
Simple FutureI will walkwe will walk
Present ProgressiveI am walkingwe are walking
Past ProgressiveI was walkingwe were walking
Present PerfectI have walkedwe have walked
Past PerfectI had walkedwe had walked
Future PerfectI will have walkedwe will have walked

4.5 Common Irregular Verbs (Essential List)

Base FormSimple PastPast Participle
bewas/werebeen
beginbeganbegun
breakbrokebroken
bringbroughtbrought
buyboughtbought
choosechosechosen
comecamecome
dodiddone
drinkdrankdrunk
drivedrovedriven
eatateeaten
fallfellfallen
flyflewflown
forgetforgotforgotten
getgotgot/gotten (US)
givegavegiven
gowentgone
havehadhad
knowknewknown
leaveleftleft
makemademade
readread (pronounced “red”)read (pronounced “red”)
runranrun
saysaidsaid
seesawseen
singsangsung
sitsatsat
speakspokespoken
taketooktaken
thinkthoughtthought
writewrotewritten

Section 5: Subject-Verb Agreement

The verb must agree with its subject in number (singular/plural) and person (1st, 2nd, 3rd).

5.1 Basic Rules

RuleExample
Singular subject → singular verbThe dog barks.
Plural subject → plural verbThe dogs bark.
I/you → take plural form (except am)I walk. You walk.
He/she/it → add -s/-esShe walks.

5.2 Special Agreement Rules

RuleExample
Indefinite pronouns (everyone, someone, nobody, each, either, neither) → singularEveryone is here. / Each has a ticket.
Either/or, neither/nor → verb agrees with the nearer subjectNeither the teacher nor the students are ready. / Neither the students nor the teacher is ready.
There is/There are → verb agrees with the following nounThere is a problem. / There are problems.
Collective nouns (team, family, audience) → singular or plural based on meaningThe team is winning. (as a unit) / The team are arguing. (individuals – BrE)
Titles, subjects, periods of time → singular“The Three Musketeers” is a novel. / Ten years is a long time.
Mathematics, news, physics, economics → singularThe news is good. / Mathematics is difficult.
Each, every, many a → singularEvery man, woman, and child needs help. / Many a student has failed.

5.3 Agreement with Compound Subjects

RuleExample
and connecting two subjects → pluralJohn and Mary are coming.
Exception: compound subject referring to same person/thing → singularMy friend and mentor is here. (same person) / Bread and butter is my breakfast.
or/nor → verb agrees with nearer subjectThe manager or the assistants are responsible.

Section 6: Verbals (Verb Forms Used as Other Parts of Speech)

Verbals are words formed from verbs but function as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs. They are not main verbs.

6.1 Infinitives

Form: to + base verb

Functions as:

  • Noun: I want to sleep. (object of want)
  • Adjective: I have a book to read. (modifies book)
  • Adverb: He called to warn us. (modifies called – purpose)

Bare infinitive (without to): after modals (can go), after let/make/see/hear (let me go)

6.2 Gerunds

Form: base verb + -ing (functions as a noun)

FunctionExample
SubjectRunning is good exercise.
ObjectI enjoy reading.
Object of prepositionShe is afraid of flying.
ComplementHer hobby is painting.

Gerund vs. Present Participle: Both end in -ing, but gerunds act as nouns, while present participles act as adjectives or form progressive tenses.

  • Swimming is fun. (gerund – subject)
  • The swimming child is happy. (participle – adjective)

6.3 Participles

Present participle: base verb + -ing (active meaning)

Past participle: varies (regular -ed or irregular) (passive or completed meaning)

FunctionPresent Participle ExamplePast Participle Example
Adjectivea boring moviea bored audience
Part of progressive tenseShe is running.
Part of perfect tenseShe has run.
Part of passive voiceThe cake was eaten.

Dangling participle error: A participle that does not clearly modify the intended noun.

  • Walking to school, a car almost hit me. (The car wasn’t walking.)
  • Walking to school, I was almost hit by a car.

Section 7: Active vs. Passive Voice

VoiceStructureFocus
ActiveSubject + verb + objectThe subject performs the action
PassiveSubject + to be + past participle (+ by agent)The subject receives the action

Examples:

  • Active: The chef cooked the meal. (chef → focus)
  • Passive: The meal was cooked (by the chef). (meal → focus)

When to use passive:

  • The agent is unknown, unimportant, or obvious: My bike was stolen.
  • The receiver is more important: The president was elected in 2020.
  • Formal/scientific writing: The solution was heated to 100°C.

Avoid overusing passive voice – active is usually stronger and clearer.


Section 8: Common Errors & How to Avoid Them

ErrorCorrectionExplanation
She don’t like coffee.She doesn’t like coffee.Third-person singular requires does not do.
They was waiting.They were waiting.Plural subject requires plural verb.
I have went there.I have gone there.Use past participle (gone) with have, not simple past (went).
He done his work.He did his work. / He has done his work.Done is past participle, needs have/has.
If I was rich… (unreal)If I were rich…Use were (subjunctive) for hypothetical/unreal situations.
She suggested him to leave.She suggested that he leave / She suggested leaving.Suggest does not take infinitive with “to”.
Let me explain you.Let me explain to you. / Let me explain it to you.Explain needs to before the indirect object.
I look forward to see you.I look forward to seeing you.To is a preposition here, so use gerund (seeing).
The committee are divided. (US English)The committee is divided.In US English, collective nouns usually take singular verb.
He can to swim.He can swim.Modals are followed by bare infinitive (no to).
She made me to laugh.She made me laugh.Make + object + bare infinitive.

Tense Shifting Error

Maintain consistent tense unless the meaning requires a change.

She walks into the room and sat down.
She walks into the room and sits down. (all present)
She walked into the room and sat down. (all past)


Section 9: Practice Exercises

Exercise 1: Identify the Verb Type

Identify whether the underlined verb is action, linking, or helping (auxiliary).

  1. She is a talented musician.
  2. The baby cried all night.
  3. They have finished the project.
  4. The soup tastes salty.
  5. He can speak three languages.

Exercise 2: Transitive or Intransitive?

Label each verb as transitive (T) or intransitive (I).

  1. She bought a new car.
  2. The sun rose at 6 AM.
  3. He told a lie.
  4. The children played outside.
  5. I understand the problem.

Exercise 3: Choose the Correct Verb Form

Fill in the blank with the correct tense.

  1. She __ (go) to the gym every day. (simple present)
  2. They __ (eat) dinner when I called. (past progressive)
  3. I __ (never / see) such a beautiful sunset. (present perfect)
  4. By next year, he __ (work) here for ten years. (future perfect)
  5. She __ (finish) her homework already. (present perfect)

Exercise 4: Subject-Verb Agreement

Choose the correct verb.

  1. Everyone in the class __ (is / are) prepared.
  2. Neither the manager nor the employees __ (was / were) satisfied.
  3. The news __ (is / are) shocking.
  4. Mathematics __ (is / are) my favorite subject.
  5. Each of the students __ (has / have) a dictionary.
  6. There __ (is / are) three books on the table.
  7. The team __ (is / are) celebrating their individual achievements. (plural sense)

Exercise 5: Correct the Errors

Rewrite each sentence correctly.

  1. She don’t know the answer.
  2. He has went to the store.
  3. If I was you, I would apologize.
  4. They was sleeping when I arrived.
  5. I look forward to meet you.
  6. She made him to clean his room.
  7. The scissors is on the table.

Exercise 6: Active vs. Passive Voice

Change the following active sentences to passive voice.

  1. The chef prepared a delicious meal.
  2. Someone stole my wallet.
  3. The company will launch a new product.
  4. The teacher is grading the exams.

Exercise 7: Identify the Verbal

Identify the underlined word as infinitive, gerund, or participle.

  1. Swimming is my favorite sport.
  2. I need to rest for a while.
  3. The broken window needs repair.
  4. She enjoys reading novels.
  5. Running quickly, he caught the bus.

Answer Key

Exercise 1

  1. Linking
  2. Action
  3. Helping
  4. Linking
  5. Helping (modal)

Exercise 2

  1. T (bought what? – a car)
  2. I (rose – no object)
  3. T (told what? – a lie)
  4. I (played – no object)
  5. T (understand what? – the problem)

Exercise 3

  1. goes
  2. were eating
  3. have never seen
  4. will have worked
  5. has finished

Exercise 4

  1. is
  2. were (nearer subject: employees – plural)
  3. is
  4. is
  5. has
  6. are
  7. are

Exercise 5

  1. She doesn’t know the answer.
  2. He has gone to the store.
  3. If I were you, I would apologize.
  4. They were sleeping when I arrived.
  5. I look forward to meeting you.
  6. She made him clean his room.
  7. The scissors are on the table.

Exercise 6

  1. A delicious meal was prepared (by the chef).
  2. My wallet was stolen.
  3. A new product will be launched (by the company).
  4. The exams are being graded (by the teacher).

Exercise 7

  1. Gerund
  2. Infinitive
  3. Participle (past)
  4. Gerund
  5. Participle (present)

Summary Checklist

After studying this module, you should be able to:

  • [ ] Define a verb and identify it as action, linking, or helping.
  • [ ] Distinguish between transitive and intransitive verbs.
  • [ ] Conjugate verbs correctly across all 12 tenses.
  • [ ] Apply subject-verb agreement rules (including irregular cases).
  • [ ] Identify and use verbals (infinitives, gerunds, participles).
  • [ ] Convert between active and passive voice appropriately.
  • [ ] Avoid common errors like tense shifting, incorrect irregular forms, and agreement mistakes.

End of Module

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