Monday 7 May 2012

Irregular verbs, how to learn easier

Many years of learning and many years of practicing can be useful when dealing with the irregular verbs. To make this easier I thought of choosing the verbs that rhymes or have the same "end": put, cut, let, set, bring, buy...etc. Some other way to make your work easier is to classify according to their form: drive (3 forms), build (2 forms), cost (1 form). If you want to learn this in an even easier way you can blend the two methods: rhyme and form! It will take a while to finish it but it worth it!

The most important thing is to see and understand what you use frequently. Don't use the whole dictionary of irregular verbs, just the verbs you know you use. To see what you need, take some of your mails, some parts of your work and highlight the verbs, the actions, the movement in there.

If you believe these actions are hard and take time, than you can try to search the verbs that have both forms admitted (regular and irregular, past and past participle) and separate them from the others.

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