A word class that describes a kind of situation such as a happening (for example, ‘climbed’ in ‘she climbed the ladder’) or a state (for example, ‘is’ in ‘a koala is an Australian mammal’).
- verbs are essential to clause structure: all clauses contain a verb, except in certain types of ellipsis (for example, ‘Sue lives in Sydney, her parents, in Melbourne’, where there is ellipsis of ‘live’ in the second clause).
- virtually all verbs have contrasting past and present tense forms. Some are signalled by inflections such as ‘-s’ and ‘-ed’. For example:
- walk/walks (present tense)
- walked (past tense).
- other verbs have irregular forms that signal a change in tense. For example:
- present – ‘am/is/are’ and past – ‘was/’were’
- present participle ‘being’ and past participle ‘been’.
Auxiliary verbs and modal verbs are two types of verbs:
- auxiliary verbs are also referred to as ‘helping’ verbs. They precede the main verb – for example, ‘draw’ (main verb) ‘has drawn’ (auxiliary verb assisting)
- modal verbs express a degree of probability (for example, ‘I might come home’) or a degree of obligation (for example ‘You must give it to me’, ‘You are not permitted to smoke in here’).
Consists of a main verb, alone or preceded by one or more auxiliary or modal verbs as modifiers.
Verb groups/phrases:
- create tense, as in ‘He [was happy]’, ‘She [is working] at home’, ‘I [have seen] him before’
- express modality using modal verbs such as ‘can’, ‘may’, ‘must’, ‘will’, ‘shall’ and so on, as in ‘You [must be] mad’, ‘He [will have arrived] by now’, ‘She [may know] them’
- create passive voice, as in ‘A photo [was taken]’
Visual choices and visual features are in English glossary but not visual knowledge
Two successive vowels that represent a single phoneme (for example, /ai/ in the word ‘rain’; /ea/in the word ‘beach’; /ee/ in the word ‘free’).