A2

Past Simple - Regular Verbs

Past Simple Regular

Past Simple - Regular Verbs in English

Overview

The past simple is the main tense for talking about completed actions and events in the past. When you tell a story, describe what happened yesterday, or talk about your childhood, you use the past simple. It is one of the most essential tenses in English.

At the CEFR A2 level, learning to form and use the past simple with regular verbs is a major milestone. Regular verbs follow a predictable pattern: add -ed to the base form. "Work" becomes "worked," "play" becomes "played," "visit" becomes "visited." The same form is used for all persons -- no conjugation changes.

The past simple is your storytelling tense. Once you master it, you can describe past experiences, recount events, and engage in conversations about what has already happened.

How It Works

Basic Formation

Subject Verb + -ed Example
I worked I worked yesterday.
You worked You worked late.
He/She/It worked She worked all day.
We worked We worked together.
They worked They worked hard.

The form is the same for every subject -- no -s, no changes.

Spelling Rules

Rule Base Form Past Form
Most verbs: add -ed work worked
Ends in -e: add -d live lived
Ends in consonant + y: change y to -ied study studied
Ends in vowel + y: add -ed play played
Short verb (CVC): double final consonant + -ed stop stopped

CVC Rule (Consonant-Vowel-Consonant)

When a short, stressed verb ends in consonant-vowel-consonant, double the final consonant:

Base Past Pattern
stop stopped st-o-p (CVC)
plan planned pl-a-n (CVC)
travel travelled (BrE) / traveled (AmE) varies by dialect

Pronunciation of -ed

The -ed ending has three different pronunciations:

Pronunciation After Examples
/t/ Voiceless sounds (k, p, f, s, sh, ch) worked, stopped, laughed
/d/ Voiced sounds (b, g, v, z, m, n, l, r) + vowels played, lived, called
/ɪd/ t or d wanted, needed, started

Time Expressions

The past simple is often used with specific time markers:

Expression Example
yesterday I worked yesterday.
last week/month/year She visited last month.
ago We arrived two hours ago.
in + year They moved in 2015.
on + day He started on Monday.

Examples in Context

English Note
I worked yesterday. Basic past simple
She studied all night. y > ied spelling change
We arrived at six o'clock. -e + d
They stopped at the store. Double consonant (CVC)
He played football last weekend. Vowel + y, just add -ed
I lived in Paris for two years. -e + d
She cooked dinner for everyone. Regular -ed
We talked for hours on the phone. Regular -ed
The movie started at eight. -ed pronounced /ɪd/ after "t"
I cleaned the house this morning. Regular -ed

Common Mistakes

Forgetting the -ed ending

  • Wrong: I work yesterday.
  • Right: I worked yesterday.
  • Why: Without -ed, the verb is in the present tense. The -ed ending is essential for indicating past time.

Doubling the consonant incorrectly

  • Wrong: I visitied him. or I visitted him.
  • Right: I visited him.
  • Why: The CVC doubling rule only applies to short (one-syllable) verbs or verbs stressed on the last syllable. "Visit" is stressed on the first syllable, so no doubling.

Misspelling the y > ied change

  • Wrong: She studyed all day.
  • Right: She studied all day.
  • Why: When the verb ends in a consonant + y, change the y to i and add -ed. But if it ends in a vowel + y, just add -ed: "played," "enjoyed."

Adding -ed to already past forms

  • Wrong: She workeded hard.
  • Right: She worked hard.
  • Why: You only add -ed once. The past form is the final form -- no additional endings.

Usage Notes

British English doubles the final consonant in more situations than American English: "travelled" (BrE) vs "traveled" (AmE), "cancelled" (BrE) vs "canceled" (AmE). Both spellings are correct in their respective varieties.

The pronunciation of -ed is something many learners overlook. Saying "want-ed" correctly with the extra syllable (/ɪd/) sounds much more natural than saying "wantd." Similarly, "worked" should sound like "workt," not "work-ed."

In formal writing, the past simple is the standard narrative tense. In casual speech, native speakers sometimes use the present tense for storytelling ("So I walk into the room and she says..."), but the past simple remains the default.

Practice Tips

  • Write a diary entry: Describe what you did yesterday using at least ten regular past simple verbs. Focus on getting the spelling right.
  • Practice the three pronunciations: Sort these verbs by their -ed sound: wanted (/ɪd/), walked (/t/), called (/d/). Read them aloud until the pronunciation feels natural.
  • Tell a story: Pick a memorable day and tell the story out loud, using past simple verbs. Record yourself and listen back to check your -ed endings.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Present SimpleA1

Concepts that build on this

More A2 concepts

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