100 Irregular Verbs | Quick Study Card

This guide lists one hundred high-frequency irregular verbs with base, past, and past participle forms plus simple patterns to learn fast.

English has many verbs that don’t follow the simple “-ed” past pattern. Learners meet them in news, films, exams, and daily chat. A tight reference that fits in one page saves time and builds real fluency. You get just that here: a clean list, plain rules that stick, and short drills to keep the set in memory.

Mastering A Hundred Irregular English Verbs Today

Scan the list once. Then read it in families. Say each row out loud: base form, past, then participle. Build short lines like “I break it,” “I broke it,” “It’s broken.” That rhythm locks the set in place. Keep notes on variants you prefer, since English accepts a few twins like learned/learnt. Stick to one style in your writing unless a teacher or job asks for a specific one.

When you want a look closer on meaning and usage, check a trusted dictionary entry:
Cambridge Grammar: Irregular Verbs,
British Council: Irregular Verbs, or
Merriam-Webster. These links explain regional notes and usage quirks.

How To Read The Chart And Avoid Tricky Mix-Ups

Base, Past, And Participle At A Glance

The first column shows the base form. Use it for the present and with “to” (to go, to see). The middle slot is the past simple. The last slot is the past participle—pair it with have/has/had, or use it after be in passive lines.

Twins And Regional Spellings

Some rows show two options. Both appear in print and speech. Pick one and keep it steady. A short guide: American books lean to “learned,” “dreamed,” “spoiled.” British books allow “learnt,” “dreamt,” “spoilt” as well. Exams accept a consistent style.

Meaning Shifts You Should Flag

Two verbs look close but carry different ideas: lay means “put something down.” lie (recline) means “rest yourself.” That pair causes slips. Note the forms: “lay–laid–laid” vs “lie–lay–lain.” Another set: hang (suspend a thing) usually “hung–hung,” but in legal or historical lines you still see “hanged.”

The Core List You Will Use Daily

Here is the compact table. It covers a hundred high-use verbs across work, study, and travel. Keep it open while you write. Add a star next to the verbs that pop up in your life a lot. That shortlist becomes your first review deck.

Base Past Past Participle
arise arose arisen
awake awoke/awakened awoken/awakened
be was/were been
bear bore borne/born
beat beat beaten
become became become
begin began begun
bend bent bent
bet bet bet
bind bound bound
bite bit bitten
bleed bled bled
blow blew blown
break broke broken
breed bred bred
bring brought brought
broadcast broadcast broadcast
build built built
burn burned/burnt burned/burnt
burst burst burst
buy bought bought
cast cast cast
catch caught caught
choose chose chosen
cling clung clung
come came come
cost cost cost
creep crept crept
cut cut cut
deal dealt dealt
dig dug dug
do did done
draw drew drawn
dream dreamed/dreamt dreamed/dreamt
drink drank drunk
drive drove driven
eat ate eaten
fall fell fallen
feed fed fed
feel felt felt
fight fought fought
find found found
flee fled fled
fling flung flung
fly flew flown
forbid forbade/forbad forbidden
forget forgot forgotten
forgive forgave forgiven
freeze froze frozen
get got got/gotten
give gave given
go went gone
grind ground ground
grow grew grown
hang hung hung
have had had
hear heard heard
hide hid hidden
hit hit hit
hold held held
hurt hurt hurt
keep kept kept
kneel knelt/kneeled knelt/kneeled
knit knit/knitted knit/knitted
know knew known
lay laid laid
lead led led
lean leaned/leant leaned/leant
leap leaped/leapt leaped/leapt
learn learned/learnt learned/learnt
leave left left
lend lent lent
let let let
lie (recline) lay lain
light lighted/lit lighted/lit
lose lost lost
make made made
mean meant meant
meet met met
pay paid paid
prove proved proven/proved
put put put
quit quit quit
read read read
ride rode ridden
ring rang rung
rise rose risen
run ran run
say said said
see saw seen
seek sought sought
sell sold sold
send sent sent
set set set
shake shook shaken
shoot shot shot
show showed shown/showed
shrink shrank/shrunk shrunk/shrunken
shut shut shut
sing sang sung
sink sank/sunk sunk/sunken
sit sat sat
sleep slept slept
speak spoke spoken
spend spent spent
spin spun spun
split split split
spring sprang/sprung sprung
stand stood stood
steal stole stolen
stick stuck stuck
sting stung stung
strike struck struck/stricken
swear swore sworn
sweep swept swept
swim swam swum
swing swung swung
take took taken
teach taught taught
tear tore torn
tell told told
think thought thought
throw threw thrown
understand understood understood
wake woke/waked woken/waked
wear wore worn
weave wove/weaved woven/weaved
weep wept wept
win won won
wind wound wound
write wrote written

Practice Plan That Builds Recall Fast

Seven-Day Micro Plan

Use short blocks. Ten minutes is plenty. Read aloud, write a few lines, and test yourself.

  1. Day 1: Read the first thirty rows out loud. Write five short sentences with different subjects.
  2. Day 2: Read rows 31–60. Record yourself saying base–past–participle for ten verbs.
  3. Day 3: Read rows 61–100. Write a tiny story in past simple. Underline the verbs.
  4. Day 4: Switch to perfect tenses. Build ten lines with have/has + participle.
  5. Day 5: Mix voices. Turn five active lines into passive ones. Keep meaning the same.
  6. Day 6: Do a blind recall. Cover the last column and fill it from memory.
  7. Day 7: Review mistakes. Make flashcards for the three patterns that still slip.

Mini Drills You Can Repeat Anywhere

  • Three-Form Loop: Pick one verb. Say “I drive, I drove, I have driven.” Move on.
  • Chain Story: Tell a tiny story using five target verbs in order. Keep it fun.
  • Swap Test: Replace a regular verb in a line with an irregular one and keep grammar right.

Families, Patterns, And Shortcuts

English looks wild, yet many verbs travel in packs. Spot the pack and the set sticks. The second table lists quick hooks.

Mini Pattern Notes Before You See The Summary

Read a few quick hooks here, then meet the full pattern table near the end. Fast exposure now, full scan later, review tomorrow.

Verb Families Walkthrough With Mini Lines

No Change Trio

Some verbs keep one shape across all forms. That saves time and keeps writing neat. Say a few lines: “We set targets last week,” “We have set new ones today.” “They cut costs,” “Costs are cut each quarter.”

Vowel Flip Trio

Here the center vowel moves. Keep vowels crisp: sing–sang–sung, ring–rang–rung, swim–swam–swum. Build tiny lines: “She sang last night,” “She has sung in a choir for years.”

-en Ending Trio

Many participles end in -en or just n. You know the sound from daily speech: break–broke–broken, speak–spoke–spoken, write–wrote–written, take–took–taken. Say these out loud and feel the final n. The sound cue helps recall under test stress.

-t Past Trio

Some past forms end in -t. You see this mostly in British lines: burn–burnt, learn–learnt, spell–spelt. American lines lean to “burned, learned, spelled.” Both styles appear in global media, so read both with ease.

Hidden Twins

Two forms shift meaning a bit. “Proved” and “proven” both work, yet some style guides prefer “proven” as an adjective: “a proven method,” and “has proved helpful” inside a sentence. Keep that small split in mind.

Tense Frames With These Verbs

Past Simple

Use this for finished time blocks. “They went to Dhaka last month.” “The team won on Friday.” No link to today.

Present Perfect

Use this for life experience or recent results. “I have seen that film.” “We have built a new tool.” The result matters now.

Past Perfect

Use this to show an earlier past. “She had left before the call.” “They had written five drafts by June.”

Passive Voice

Pair be with the participle. “The report was written yesterday.” “Bids were sent at noon.” Use this when the doer is unknown or not the point.

Mini Stories Using Verb Packs

City Morning

I woke early, built a quick plan, then drove across town. A bus caught a light and traffic grew loud. I took a side road, found a space, and ran inside just as the meeting began. By noon we had broken the big problem into parts and a calm mood rose.

Weekend Trip

We left after lunch and rode along the river. A cool wind blew and clouds hung low. By dusk we had chosen a spot, set the tent, and lit a small fire. Someone brought tea. We sat close and stories sprang from the day.

Editing Checklist For Clean Verb Form

  • Scan every perfect tense. Make sure the third form sits after have/has/had.
  • After “did,” check the main verb. It should be base form.
  • Pick one style for any twin pair and keep it steady across the page.
  • Read your draft out loud. Stress the three forms where they appear.
  • Check subject–verb match in present lines with the base form.

Collocations And Handy Pairs

These verbs often travel with set nouns or short phrases. Using these pairs lifts your natural tone.

  • Make: make a call, make a plan, make a promise.
  • Take: take a seat, take a risk, take notes.
  • Give: give advice, give a tour, give notice.
  • Hold: hold a meeting, hold a license, hold stock.
  • Set: set goals, set a timer, set a record.
  • Pay: pay a fee, pay attention, pay a visit.
  • Keep: keep track, keep calm, keep a secret.
  • Break: break news, break a rule, break even.
  • Run: run a test, run late, run a company.
  • Lead: lead a team, lead a class, lead the field.

Self-Test: Fill The Right Form

Pick the best form for each line. Answers sit below the set.

  1. She has ______ the email. (send)
  2. I ______ the keys on the desk. (leave)
  3. They had ______ the case before July. (solve)
  4. We ______ a booth at the fair last year. (build)
  5. He has ______ three pages so far. (write)
  6. The price ______ after the news. (rise)
  7. We ______ across the lake at dawn. (swim)
  8. She ______ the door and walked out. (shut)
  9. I ______ the train at 8:10. (catch)
  10. They have ______ two new sites. (choose)
  11. We ______ the new rules on Monday. (teach)
  12. The glass ______ on the floor. (break)
  13. She ______ the bill already. (pay)
  14. He ______ the files to the cloud. (put)
  15. They ______ the lights at ten. (shut)
  16. I have ______ that song many times. (sing)
  17. We ______ the last unit in May. (read)
  18. He ______ the bike to work. (ride)
  19. They ______ the test yesterday. (take)
  20. We had ______ the room by noon. (sweep)

Self-Test Answers

  1. sent
  2. left
  3. solved
  4. built
  5. written
  6. rose
  7. swam
  8. shut
  9. caught
  10. chosen
  11. taught
  12. broke
  13. paid
  14. put
  15. shut
  16. sung
  17. read
  18. rode
  19. took
  20. swept

Teacher And Trainer Notes

Build spaced sets of ten. Week one covers rows 1–30, week two 31–60, week three 61–100. Mix listening, speaking, reading, and short writing. Use a simple grid on paper so students say all three forms on one breath. Mark twins in a color so the class agrees on a house style.

Regional Notes And Style Choices

Both global styles work in modern writing. A short list helps:

  • learned/learnt, dreamed/dreamt, burned/burnt: US books use the -ed line more. UK books allow both lines.
  • spoiled/spoilt, knelt/kneeled, leaped/leapt: mixed use across regions. Pick one.
  • got/gotten: US keeps “gotten” as a participle in many lines; UK sticks with “got.”
  • fit/fitted: engineering and tailoring often take “fitted” for actions, “fit” for state.

Real-World Templates

Project Update

“We have built the prototype and the team has run basic tests. Two bugs were found and a patch has been written. We sent the report on Tuesday.”

Service Email

“Thank you for your note. We have taken a look and the refund has been issued. The amount should show on your card within three days.”

Extend The List For Your Field

Writers in law, science, and tech meet a few extra forms. Add rows like “set,” “cost,” and “read” in context that fits your field. Keep all three slots in your sheet even when a verb shows no change. The habit keeps notes tidy.

Deep Notes On Ten High-Impact Verbs

Be

This verb builds passive lines and links subjects to states. Watch short forms in speech: I’m, you’re, they’re. Past forms split: was/were. The participle is “been,” used after have/has/had.

Have

Use it as a main verb (“I have a bike”) and as a helper for perfect tenses (“I have seen that”). In fast speech many speakers drop the h sound; keep the full form in careful writing.

Do

As a main verb it carries meaning: “We do our best.” As a helper it builds negatives and questions: “Did you go?” After did, the next verb is base form.

Go

The past is “went,” which looks odd because it comes from a different old verb. The participle “gone” pairs with have/has/had: “She has gone home.”

Get

This verb carries many shades: receive, become, bring. The participle splits by region: US keeps “gotten” in many lines (“has gotten better”), while UK keeps “got” (“has got better”). Be clear about your house style.

Make

Pairs with many nouns: make a choice, make time, make progress. It shows creation or result. Do not mix it with “do” in set phrases.

Take

Use it for time and actions: take a minute, take a seat, take notes. The participle is “taken.” Many idioms use it, so it earns a high study rank.

Come

Short, common, and flexible. Past form “came,” participle “come.” Watch the fixed phrase “come to” for regaining awareness, and “come up with” for ideas.

See

Use it for sight and for making sense. Past “saw,” participle “seen.” Many lines take it with present perfect for life experience: “I have seen snow twice.”

Give

Past “gave,” participle “given.” Pairs with advice, talks, and gifts. Note “give up” (quit) and “give in” (yield). Phrasal forms add range to your speech.

Pattern Summary Table

Pattern Memory Hook Examples
No Change Same form in all three slots bet • cut • put • set • shut
Vowel Change Base vowel shifts in past/participle sing–sang–sung • ring–rang–rung
n/-en Ending Participle ends with n or -en break–broke–broken • write–wrote–written
-t Past Past/participle use -t burn–burnt • learn–learnt
u In Participle u appears only in participle drink–drank–drunk • swim–swam–swum
w→o→o/n o or -own in later forms blow–blew–blown • grow–grew–grown
Keep Final d/t Final consonant stays build–built–built • send–sent–sent
Prefix Re- Uses Same Base Re- + verb keeps pattern rewrite–rewrote–rewritten (extends write)
American Vs British Twin Two spellings live side by side dreamed/dreamt • learned/learnt
Linking Auxiliaries Use have/has/had with participle I have eaten, she had gone

Common Errors And Easy Fixes

Mixing Up The Twin Pair “Lay” And “Lie”

Match meaning first. If you place an object, use “lay.” If you rest yourself, use “lie.” Then pick forms.

Dropping The Participle After “Have”

Perfect tenses need the third form. Say “I have eaten,” not “I have ate.” Train your ear with the loop drill.

Using A Past Form After “Did”

After the helper did, the main verb returns to base: “did go,” not “did went.”

Switching Styles Mid-Essay

Pick one style for twin forms. Stick with it across the page. Readers value steady voice.

Pronunciation Tips That Save Time

Short, strong stress helps. Say each set with a beat: “breakbrokebroken.” Keep vowel shifts clean: /ɪ/ to /æ/ to /ʌ/ in “drink–drank–drunk.” Watch silent letters: the l in “could” is silent in modern speech, but that verb is regular now, so it sits outside this list. Record yourself and compare to a dictionary audio clip.

Writing, Exams, And Real-World Use

Emails And Reports

Past events take past simple. Results that still matter take present perfect. “We met on Monday.” “We have spoken twice this week.”

Academic Tasks

Style guides ask for steady form choices. If your class uses a British coursebook, write “learnt” only if that book models it. Many teachers accept either line.

Interviews And Small Talk

Questions about experience often take the perfect: “Have you driven a stick shift?” Answer with the same frame and give a short line of detail.

Keep The Set Fresh With Simple Tools

Set a spaced review on your phone. A repeat on day 1, 3, 7, 21 keeps gains. Build a tiny deck in any flashcard app. Add your own sentences, not just bare forms. That keeps the verbs tied to meaning, not noise.

Bookmark the reference links above. When a new verb pops up, check the entry and add a row to your personal sheet. Over time your sheet beats any generic list because it reflects your life and your job.

Quick Reference Sentences

Use these short lines as a warm-up. Read each one, then swap the subject or time marker to test forms.

  • I bought tickets yesterday. We have bought seats before.
  • She took a taxi at noon. She has taken that route often.
  • They drove all night. They have driven across the country twice.
  • He kept a copy. He has kept notes since school.
  • The team won last week. The club has won three seasons in a row.
  • I felt better by noon. I have felt fine all day.
  • We built a model. We have built a habit of testing each part.
  • She spoke to the group. She has spoken at many events.

Your 30-Day Plan

This light plan keeps the set in view without burning time. Each step takes ten to fifteen minutes.

  1. Week 1: Read rows 1–30 daily. Record one minute of voice. Write five lines with present perfect.
  2. Week 2: Switch to rows 31–60. Add ten passive lines. Share one short note with a study buddy.
  3. Week 3: Move to rows 61–100. Write a 120-word story in past simple. Mark any weak spots.
  4. Week 4: Mix the full set. Do two blind recalls. Create a cheat sheet of ten verbs that still slow you down.

Master these forms and your writing reads clean, your speech flows, and tests feel fair. Keep the list nearby, train with short loops, and the set moves from study to habit.