Types of Verbs in English with Easy Examples

Types of Verbs in English with Easy Examples

In this blog post, you will learn the types of verbs in easy wording. Verbs are action or state words that help you build clear sentences. With short examples, you will understand how each type works, so you can speak and write better English with confidence.

What are Verbs?

A verb is a word that shows action or state of being.

It tells what someone or something does.

  • Ali runs fast.
  • She is happy.

So, a verb tells us what is happening in a sentence.

Types of Verbs in English with Easy Examples
Verbs Types Explained in English

Types of Verbs in English

Let’s learn the main types of verbs one by one with easy meanings and examples.

Action Verbs

Action verbs show what a person or thing is doing.

Examples:

  • He eats an apple.
  • They play cricket.
  • I write a letter.

Easy Tip: If you can do it, it’s an action verb.

Linking Verbs

Linking verbs do not show action. They connect the subject with more information.

Common linking verbs: is, am, are, was, were, be, been, being

Examples:

  • She is smart.
  • They are tired.
  • It was a great day.

Easy Tip: If the verb tells what something is, then it’s a linking verb.

Helping Verbs (Auxiliary Verbs)

Helping verbs help the main verb in a sentence.

Common helping verbs: is, am, are, was, were, have, has, had, will, shall, can, could, would, should

Examples:

  • She is reading a book.
  • I have finished my work.
  • We will go tomorrow.

Easy Tip: If the verb comes before the action, it is a helping verb.

Transitive Verbs

Transitive verbs need an object to complete the sentence.

Examples:

  • He reads a book.
  • She watches TV.

Object is needed after the verb.

Intransitive Verbs

Intransitive verbs do not need an object.

Examples:

  • He sleeps peacefully.
  • They arrived late.

No object is used.

Regular Verbs

Regular verbs form the past tense by adding -ed.

Examples:

Base Verb Past Tense Example Sentence
play played We played football.
clean cleaned She cleaned her room.
talk talked I talked to my friend.
watch watched They watched a movie.
walk walked He walked to school.

Note: Regular verbs make their past tense by simply adding -ed.

Irregular Verbs

Irregular verbs do not follow the -ed rule.

Examples:

Base Verb Past Tense Example Sentence
go went She went to the market.
eat ate I ate a sandwich.
take took He took my pen.
see saw We saw a rainbow.
come came They came early.

Note: Irregular verbs do not follow the -ed rule. Their past forms are different and must be memorized.

Stative Verbs

These verbs describe a state, not an action. They usually talk about feelings, thoughts, possession, or senses.

Examples:

  • I believe you.
  • She owns a car.
  • This cake tastes good.

Tip: Stative verbs are not usually used in continuous tense.

Dynamic Verbs

These are the opposite of stative verbs. They show real actions or movements.

Examples:

  • He runs every morning.
  • They build houses.

Most action verbs are

Phrasal Verbs

A phrasal verb is made by combining a verb + preposition/adverb. The meaning is often different from the original verb.

Examples:

  • He gave up smoking.
  • She looks after her baby.

Tip: You must learn them as phrases because meaning often changes completely.

Causative Verbs

These verbs show that one person causes another to do something. Common causative verbs are make, let, have, get.

Examples:

  • She made him cry.
  • I got my car washed.
  • They let him go.

Modal Verbs (also called Modal Auxiliaries)

Modal verbs show possibility, permission, ability, or necessity.

Common modals: can, could, may, might, must, shall, should, will, would

  • You should study.
  • She can swim.
  • We might go later.

They are always used with base form of verb (without “to”).

Verb Types Summary

Verb Type Meaning / Use Example
Action Shows real action He runs fast.
Linking Shows state or connection She is tired.
Helping Supports the main verb They are going.
Transitive Needs an object I read a book.
Intransitive No object needed She cried loudly.
Regular Past = Verb + ed We played well.
Irregular Past = Different form He went home.
Stative Describes state or feeling I love pizza.
Dynamic Describes real action He runs daily.
Phrasal Verb + preposition/adverb She gave up early.
Causative One causes another to act I had him fix it.
Modal Shows mood/ability/necessity You must learn this.

Easy Practice

Find the verb in these sentences:

  1. The cat sleeps on the sofa.
  2. She is reading a novel.
  3. I played football yesterday.
  4. They were happy.
  5. He goes to school.

Answers:

  1. sleeps | 2. is reading | 3. played | 4. were | 5. goes

FAQs

Q1: What is the most common verb in English?
A: The verb “be” (is, am, are) is the most common.

Q2: How can I know the type of a verb?
A: Look at what the verb is doing. Is it showing action? Is it helping? Is it connecting? That tells you the type.

Q3: Can a verb be both helping and action?
A: Yes, for example: She is running. → “is” = helping, “running” = action.

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About Matloob

Matloob is a Mentor at vocabzoo.com, where learning English becomes fun and easy. With over 7 years of experience in research, English lessons, and content writing, Matloob is dedicated to helping English learners build their skills with confidence.

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