To make the past tense of jump, you add these two letters.
What is -ed?
This is the past tense of eat.
What is ate?
This is the past tense of give, like when you handed someone a gift.
What is gave?
This word is added to a verb to show something will happen later.
What is will?
The past tense of jump is made by adding these two letters.
What is -ed?
This is the past tense of wash.
What is washed?
This word is what you did when you spoke to your friend yesterday.
What is said?
This verb tells what a bird did when it moved through the sky.
What is flew?
Change this sentence to the future tense: “I play soccer.”
What is, "I will play soccer?"
This is the past tense of eat, like when you had lunch yesterday.
What is ate?
When a verb ends in e, like bake, you only add this to make it past tense.
What is -d?
This past-tense verb describes what happened when the plant got taller.
What is grew?
This past-tense verb describes when you carried something with you to school yesterday.
What is brought?
This phrase can be used to show future tense when someone already has a plan.
What is going to?
Change this sentence to future tense: “I play outside.”
What is, "I will play outside."
This is the past tense of stop. (Hint: You double the final consonant!)
What is stopped?
This is the past tense of make, like when you built a paper airplane.
What is made?
This verb means you used your brain to consider or wonder about something.
What is thought?
Change this sentence to the future tense: “They walk to school.”
What is, "They will walk to school."
This is the past tense of carry.
What is carried?
This is the past tense of carry. (Hint: Change the y to this letter before adding -ed.)
What is carried?
This verb tells what you did when you traveled on a bike or horse.
What is rode?
This is the past tense of write, like when you finished your story.
What is wrote?
This future-tense sentence is missing something: “She ___ bake a cake tomorrow.”
Fill in the blank.
What is will. (She will bake a cake tomorrow.)
Complete the sentence in future tense with an irregular verb: “Tomorrow, I ___ a story.” (write)
What is will write?