A past participle is a verb form we use with have or has to make the Present Perfect tense.
Examples:
I have visited Spain.
She has seen that movie.
🧠 The past participle tells us that something happened before now, but we don’t say exactly when.
The three main verb forms
In English, every verb has three main forms:
| Base Form | Past Simple (Verb II) | Past Participle (Verb III) |
|---|---|---|
| go | went | gone |
| eat | ate | eaten |
| watch | watched | watched |
We use:
- Base form → for now (I go to school every day.)
- Past simple → for yesterday (I went to school yesterday.)
- Past participle → with have/has (I have gone to school.)
Regular verbs
For regular verbs, the past participle ends in -ed (just like the past simple).
| Base | Past | Past Participle |
|---|---|---|
| work | worked | worked |
| play | played | played |
| visit | visited | visited |
Examples:
I have visited my grandparents.
We have played soccer many times.
Irregular verbs
Some verbs don’t follow the “-ed” rule.
These are called irregular verbs. You must learn them.
| Base | Past | Past Participle |
|---|---|---|
| go | went | gone |
| see | saw | seen |
| do | did | done |
| eat | ate | eaten |
| have | had | had |
Examples:
I have gone to Italy.
She has seen that movie before.
He has done his homework.
Why is it important?
You need the past participle to make the Present Perfect tense, which is used to talk about life experiences:
Have you ever been to Canada?
I have never tried sushi.
We have visited many cities.
📘 Common Irregular Verbs
This is a basic list of the most common irregular verbs in English.
It’s a great place to start, but remember, there are many more irregular verbs that you’ll learn as you continue studying.
👉 Focus on a few verbs each week and use them in real sentences.
The more you read, listen, and speak, the easier it will be to remember new ones naturally.
Keep this table as your starter guide, and you’ll build your verb knowledge step by step.
# Base Form
(Verb I)Past Simple
(Verb II)Past Participle
(Verb III)Example Sentence 1 be was / were been I’ve been to Italy. 2 become became become He’s become more confident. 3 begin began begun The class has just begun. 4 break broke broken I’ve broken my glasses. 5 buy bought bought She’s bought new shoes. 6 choose chose chosen Have you chosen a movie? 7 come came come They’ve come home. 8 do did done He’s done his homework. 9 drink drank drunk She’s drunk all the juice. 10 drive drove driven He’s driven to work today. 11 eat ate eaten Have you eaten yet? 12 feel felt felt I’ve felt tired all day. 13 find found found I’ve found my keys. 14 forget forgot forgotten I’ve forgotten your name! 15 get got got I’ve got a new job. 16 give gave given They’ve given me a gift. 17 go went gone We’ve gone to the park. 18 have had had She’s had breakfast already. 19 know knew known Have you known her long? 20 leave left left She’s left her bag at home. 21 make made made He’s made a cake. 22 meet met met We’ve met before. 23 read read /rɛd/ read /rɛd/ I’ve read that book. 24 say said said She’s said sorry. 25 see saw seen I’ve seen that movie. 26 take took taken We’ve taken lots of photos. 27 tell told told He’s told me the story. 28 think thought thought I’ve thought about it. 29 wear wore worn I’ve worn this jacket before. 30 write wrote written He’s written three emails.
Let’s practice
Practice 1
Practice 2
Speaking
Choose a card and say the base form – simple past – past participle.
Example:
go – went- gone
If you don’t remember, you can check the table of irregular verbs
[…] past participle […]
[…] Passive = be (am / is / are / was / were) + past participle (V3) […]
[…] BE + Past Participle (V3) […]
[…] + had + past participle, would have + past […]