Mastering Irregular Verbs once and for all

Wednesday, October 15, 2025
3 min read
Mastering Irregular Verbs once and for all

Mastering irregular verbs once and for all is totally doable — but it takes smart strategy, not just rote memorization. Here’s a practical step-by-step plan that actually works:

1. Group by Pattern — Not Alphabet

Irregular verbs look random, but most follow hidden patterns. Grouping helps your brain form connections.

Examples:

  • All 3 forms the same:
    cut–cut–cut, put–put–put, hit–hit–hit
  • -t ending change:
    build–built–built, send–sent–sent, keep–kept–kept
  • Vowel change patterns:
    • i–a–u → sing–sang–sung, drink–drank–drunk
    • i–o–en → write–wrote–written, ride–rode–ridden
    • ea–e–ea → read–read–read, lead–led–led

👉 Make 6–8 logical groups and study each one for a week.

2. Focus on the Most Useful 50 First

There are 200+ irregular verbs, but 50 cover 90% of daily conversation.
Examples: be, have, go, get, make, say, know, take, see, come, etc.
Master those before worrying about rarer ones like forsake or strew.


3. Use Them in Context (Not Lists)

Memorizing lists doesn’t work long-term — your brain needs meaning and context.

Try this:

  • Make 3–5 example sentences for each verb.
    Example:
    “I went to bed early.”
    “I’ve gone there before.”
    “Let’s go now.”
  • Or create short stories using 5–10 irregular verbs at once.

4. Train Your Ear

Listen for irregular verbs in real speech — songs, TV shows, YouTube, etc.
Every time you hear one, pause and think:

“What form was that — past or past participle?”

This builds natural grammar awareness subconsciously.


5. Do Mini Drills — But Smartly

Use quick, daily bursts instead of long, boring sessions.

Tools:

  • Quizlet or Anki flashcards (with audio + example sentences)
  • Apps like English Grammar in Use or Irregular Verbs Trainer
  • Dictation exercises (“He ___ (go) home yesterday.” → “went”)

6. Review with “Spaced Repetition”

Instead of re-studying everything at once, revisit your verbs after 1 day, 3 days, 1 week, 2 weeks, 1 month.
This is how memory becomes permanent.


7. Gamify Practice

Make it fun:

  • Irregular verb bingo or matching games
  • “Verb races” with classmates
  • Online games (e.g., British Council’s irregular verbs games)

8. Use Them in Speaking and Writing

Set weekly goals:

  • Week 1: Use 10 target verbs in conversation.
  • Week 2: Write a short story using 15 irregular verbs.
  • Week 3: Record yourself using them naturally.

Production locks them in permanently.

Tags:

#english grammar#grammar practice#how to learn english#irregular verbs