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|
DISEÑADO EN |
60 |
LECCIONES |
Many
students have difficulties with the -ED ending of regular verbs. The objective of this
article is to clarify how to pronounce past simple and past
participle correctly. |
GENERAL REVISION |
The past simple tense and past
participle of all regular verbs end in -ed. For
example: |
base
verb
(1)
|
past
simple
(2)
|
past
participle
(3)
|
work
|
worked
|
worked
|
In addition, many adjectives are made
from the past participle and so end in -ed. For example: I like painted furniture (represented
in a painting); He likes naked paintings (completely
unclothed); He was a wicked old man (morally bad). |
We can pronounce the -ED form of the past
simple and past participle in THREE different ways:
/id/
or
/t/
or /d/
The chart below can help you to understand the differences. |
If
the base verb ends in
one of these sounds:
|
Example
base verb (*):
|
Example
with -ed:
|
Pronounce
the -ed:
|
Extra
syllable?
|
UNVOICED
|
/t/
|
want
|
wanted
|
/id/
|
yes
|
VOICED
|
/d/
|
end
|
ended
|
UNVOICED
|
/p/
|
hope
|
hoped
|
/t/
|
no
|
/f/
|
laugh
|
laughed
|
/s/
|
fax
|
faxed
|
/S/
|
wash
|
washed
|
/tS/
|
watch
|
watched
|
/k/
|
like
|
liked
|
VOICED
|
all
other sounds,
for example...
|
play
|
played
|
/d/
|
allow
|
allowed
|
beg
|
begged
|
(*) Note that it is the SOUND that is
important, not the letter or spelling. For example,
"fax" ends in the letter "x" but the sound /s/;
"like" ends in the letter "e" but the sound
/k/. |
Please, remember that the following
adjectives ending in -ED are always pronounced with /id/: |
AGED |
BLESSED |
CROOKED |
DOGGED |
LEARNED |
NAKED |
RAGGED |
WICKED |
WRETCHED |
|