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Look specifically at the tense.
Specifically, it is divided into simple tense, continuous tense, past tense, and perfect tense.
Specific examples: he is here
he was here
he had been here
Etcetera...
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The verb plus ed is a past participle.
Part of speech. The pastparticiple (English: pastparticiple) is a type of participle, usually containing a passive meaning, and the past participle of a regular verb is generally composed of a verb plus -ed (see below for rules).
The usage of the English verb plus ed is as follows:
1. The regular verb is in the past tense.
The change can be shortwritten as straight, go, double, change four words.
In general, -ed is added directly after the original form of the verb. Such as: wanted, played.
For verbs ending with the unpronounced letter e, remove e and add -ed. Such as: hoped, lived.
Stress closed syllables.
Words need to be double-written with the last consonant letter followed by -ed. For example: stopped.
Verbs ending with the consonant letter + y change y to i and add -ed. e.g. studied, worried.
2. Irregular verb changes should be memorized one by one. Be verb.
There are two forms of the past tense, and the subject is first.
One or three people use the singular form of was, and the others use were.
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If there is a past time in a general sentence, change the verb to the past tense.
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Regular verbs are generally added to become past participles.
The past participle of the transitive verb is used as a predicate, and the subject of the sentence is passive, indicating the state of the subject, not only indicating passivity, but also emphasizing completion. Example sentence: The cup is brokenThe teacup broke.
The past participle of the intransitive verb is used as a predicate, and the subject of the sentence is actively related, indicating the state of the subject, and also emphasizing the completion of the action. Example sentence: he is retiredHe is retired.
Some past participles, when used as predicates, form a predicate that is close to a passive structure.
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The verb plus ing is the present participle.
The addition of ed is either in the past tense (only for rule changes) or past participle (only for rule changes).
I forgot the example of the adjective plus ed.
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The verb +ing ed indicates the time when this action takes place and is a voice state.
The adjective ing ed is to indicate the attribute of the noun in the sentence, such as interesting interested, the subject of interest is generally a person, and the subject of interesting is generally a thing.
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Verb affixes are so-so.
Table tense progression or past.
doing/done
Adjective affixes generally refer to a person or thing.
interesting interested, for example, you say i am interested in doing sth or swimming is interesting
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English words for ed: watered, cooked, collected, wanted, glowed, etc.
1、watered
English [.]'w :t d] beauty ['w :t respectfully d].
adj.water-blended; sprinkled with water; "Beauty" plus virtual shares; The face value increases but the real value does not increase proportionally.
v.Give....water to drink (past tense and past participle of water); In....watering [sprinkling]; Mix water (into the wine); (especially a river) flows through and supplies water to (an area).
2、cooked
English [k kt] American [k kt].
adj.Boiled [cooked] cooked.
v.cooking (past tense and past participle of cook); Fabricate; Tamper; Plot.
3、collected
English [k lekt d] American [k l kt d].
adj.Stiff upper lip; Collected.
v.Collect (past tense and past participle of collect).
4、wanted
English [ w nt d] American [ wɑ:nt d].
adj.Wanted by the Buried Defeat; solicited.
v.Missing( past tense and past participle of want ); Should; Intend; Yes....Present.
5、glowed
v.(flamelessly) burn (past tense of glow and past participle of bending); Blush; In particular, hot objects emit a faint and steady light; Joy in shape.
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