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Here are four verbs with tricky past tenses. Bear. When your verb has homonyms, its dictionary entry can feel like a maze. When you look up “bear,” for example, you have to skim past all the ...
The past tense of “lie” is downright cruel: It’s “lay.” The past participle is “lain.” Today I lie down. Yesterday I lay down. In the past I have lain down.
All verbs have a past, present and future form. Watch the video and play the activity to find out more with this primary English KS1 and KS2 Bitesize guide.
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