So let's take another - let's take an irregular word like run. And there are plenty of words in English, as you have no doubt discovered, that don't behave that way at all. Present with e-d tacked onto it, and then the future with Present tense is one form of the verb, then the past tense is the But there are plenty of verbs in English, as you have no doubt discovered, that don't follow that basic rule. Past tense, talked, with that e-d ending.
The present, and the future, this is what it's going to look like. So if we take a regular verb and we put it in the past, Idea of a regular verb that we can conjugate in all tenses and it's just going to behave
Today I want to start talkingĪbout irregular verbs.