Instructional Video5:50
Cerebellum

Spanish: Regular Verbs

9th - 12th
Learn how to manipulate Regular Verbs. This clip is part 8 in the series 'Learning Spanish: Beyond the Basics'.
Instructional Video6:30
TMW Media

Regular and Irregular verbs

K - 5th
This lesson teaches Vocabulary, Nouns (people, places, things) Regular & Irregular Verbs, Identifiers (this/that/these/those), Prepositions. Nouns: We start with nouns which are a person, a place, or a thing. They are the essential...
Instructional Video15:37
Wonderscape

Regular and Irregular Verbs

K - 5th
Learn how to form and use regular and irregular verbs in the present and past tense. Rules are presented with numerous examples to reinforce key concepts. A comprehensive list of irregular verbs are covered to ensure familiarity with...
Instructional Video
Khan Academy

Khan Academy: The Truly Irregular Verbs

9th - 10th
Some irregular verbs just won't be categorized. They don't fit into neat little boxes. These are those verbs.
Instructional Video
Khan Academy

Khan Academy: The Vowel Shift Irregular Verb

9th - 10th
This group of irregular verbs have vowel sounds that change in a predictable way, when they go from the present to the past tense.
Instructional Video
Khan Academy

Khan Academy: The Irregular Verb Gets Taken for a Ride

9th - 10th
Some irregular verbs have these strange -en endings that only show up in their past perfect/past participle forms. Let's take a look!
Instructional Video
Khan Academy

Khan Academy: The Funky Ed Irregular Verb

9th - 10th
These are the most regular of the irregular verbs; while they don't behave exactly like regular verbs, like present tense 'walk' become past tense 'walked', they do maintain the '-ed' sound. It's just spelled differently.
Instructional Video
Khan Academy

Khan Academy: Introduction to Irregular Verbs

9th - 10th Standards
Words like 'walk' and 'look' are regular verbs - they behave in a predictable way. But there's a whole class of words in English, called irregular verbs, that are harder to predict. David, KA's Grammar Fellow, explains.