Talk:Regular verb
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example words of participle of regular verbs
- Sorry, I don't understand. Are you requesting something? The article already gives an example of this for English ("talked"). --Doric Loon 08:42, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] use of the verb comprise
I need to understand that, can the verb "comrpise" be followed by the preposition "of" —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 203.200.197.65 (talk) 07:05, 11 December 2006 (UTC).
- This is a question of verb valancy. To my mind, comprise must have a direct object, though the passive to be comprised of does have a preposition. But people do use such things in a variety of ways. --Doric Loon 17:08, 11 December 2006 (UTC)i realy want some of the example of regular verrb iam qaisar from bnuner and i have dificalty in understanding the ir regular verb
[edit] List
I´m brasiliam and I´m doing level intermediate and I would like to know if have a complete list of the irregular verbs...
- Yup. List of English irregular verbs --Doric Loon 13:19, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Merge
I say don't. They are two entirely different things, and as such, require two entirely different articles. Jmlk17 23:43, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
- Undecided. Since regular and irregular define themselves with reference to each other, a single article would make sense if it is managable, but we would want two articles if we have so much to say about each that separate discussions would be meaningful. The problem is that at present these two overlap, and in particular there is quite a lot of material on irregular verbs in this Regular Verb article. That suggests that we are not keeping these separate anyway. I suggest we first rationalise the two articles, and we may find the Regular Verb article is reduced to a stub which should be merged. --Doric Loon 05:36, 16 April 2007 (UTC)
- The result of the merge would be Regular and irregular verb (like Even and odd functions is the unique article for even functions and odd functions). 16@r 10:14, 2 June 2007 (UTC)