The 9 English Parts of Speech: 1. Verbs
The 9 English Parts of Speech: 1. Verbs
The 9 English Parts of Speech: 1. Verbs
These are the words that you use to make a sentence. There are 9 word
classes, and the most important is the Verb!
1. Verbs
In this section we look at the grammar of verbstheir structure and form
and how we use them in spoken and written English.
The verb is king in English. The shortest sentence contains a verb. You can
make a one-word sentence with a verb, for example: "Stop!" You cannot
make a one-word sentence with any other type of word.
Verbs are sometimes described as "action words". This is partly true. Many
verbs give the idea of action, of "doing" something. For example, words
like run, fight, do and workall convey action.
But some verbs do not give the idea of action; they give the idea of
existence, of state, of "being". For example, verbs like be, exist,
seem and belong all convey state.
A verb always has a subject. (In the sentence "John speaks
English", John is the subject and speaks is the verb.) In simple terms,
therefore, we can say that verbs are words that tell us what a
subject does or is; they describe:
There is something very special about verbs in English. Most other words
(adjectives, adverbs, prepositions etc) do not change in form (although
nouns can have singular and plural forms). But almost all verbs change in
form. For example, the verb to work has five forms:
Of course, this is still very few forms compared to some languages which
may have thirty or more forms for a single verb.
Verb Classification
We divide verbs into two broad classifications:
Helping Verbs
I can.
People must.
Now imagine that the same stranger walks into your room and says:
I teach.
People eat.
In the following table we see example sentences with helping verbs and
main verbs. Notice that all of these sentences have a main verb. Only some
of them have a helping verb.
helping verb
main verb
John
likes
coffee.
You
lied
to me.
They
are
happy.
The children
are
playing.
We
must
go
now.
do
want
any.
not
Helping Verbs
Helping verbs are also called "auxiliary verbs".
Helping verbs have no meaning on their own. They are necessary for the
grammatical structure of a sentence, but they do not tell us very much
alone. We usually use helping verbs with main verbs. They "help" the main
verb (which has the real meaning). There are only about 15 helping verbs
in English, and we divide them into two basic groups:
Primary helping verbs (3 verbs)
These are the verbs be, do, and have. Note that we can use these three
verbs as helping verbs or as main verbs. On this page we talk about them
as helping verbs. We use them in the following cases:
be
have
do
We use modal helping verbs to "modify" the meaning of the main verb in
some way. A modal helping verb expresses necessity or possibility, and
changes the main verb in that sense. These are the modal verbs:
can, could
may, might
will, would,
shall, should
must
ought to
Main Verbs
Main verbs are also called "lexical verbs".
Main verbs have meaning on their own (unlike helping verbs). There are
thousands of main verbs, and we can classify them in several ways:
Transitive and intransitive verbs
I saw an elephant.
He speaks English.
intransitive:
He has arrived.
Linking verbs
A linking verb does not have much meaning in itself. It "links" the subject
to what is said about the subject. Usually, a linking verb shows equality (=)
or a change to a different state or place (). Linking verbs are always
intransitive (but not all intransitive verbs are linking verbs).
Some verbs describe action. They are called "dynamic", and can be used
with continuous tenses. Other verbs describe state (non-action, a
situation). They are called "stative", and cannot normally be used with
continuous tenses (though some of them can be used with continuous
tenses with a change in meaning).
dynamic verbs (examples):
be