The Past Form Of Slot
The past simple tense (also called the simple past tense, or simply the past simple) is used to express completed actions.It is known as the past simple because it does not require any auxiliary verbs to complete its meaning; its structure is simply the past-tense form of the verb. The origins of slot machines can be traced back to the late 19th Century. The first slot machine was developed by the New York based company, Sittman and Pitt in 1891. The game had 5 drums with a total of 50 playing cards. The machine could be found in many bars, and cost a nickel to play.
When reading articles on the web, especially those on personal blogs, if I see one grammatical error I hesitate to be too critical. Typos happen. When I see the same error a second time, I sense a problem.
Today, 48 states have some form of legal gambling. Only Hawaii and Utah do not. Over 60% of American adults gambled last year or over the past twelve months on some activity.
Here are examples of the same error that occurred in two separate posts on the same site. They really stood out because overall the blogger was writing standard English.
…I’ve began to feed…
… she has began disciplining …
Television dins incorrect forms into our ears every hour of every day, and not many teachers outside the English classroom insist that their students speak a standard dialect at school. Errors with the few remaining English irregular verbs are bound to proliferate.
The most common errors with irregular verbs occur with the past participle form.


The Past Form Of Sink
The “past participle” is the form of the verb that is used with the auxiliaries has, have, and had.
The usual error is that the writer or speaker uses the simple past where the past participle is called for.
Most English verbs form the simple past and the past participle by adding -ed to the simple present, but about 150 common English verbs do not.
More than half of these irregular verbs do not present a problem with the past participle because it’s the same as the simple past. For example:
fight fought [have] fought
find found [have] found
cling clung [have] clung
feed fed [have] fed
That leaves 65-70 irregular verbs whose past participle form is different from the simple past form. For example:
go went [have] gone
begin began [have] begun
see saw [have] seen
Most ESL sites include alphabetical lists of common irregular English verbs.

If you’d like to see a breakdown of the irregular verbs according to the form of the past participle, I’ve categorized them on my AmericanEnglishDoctor teaching site:
Category One: simple present, simple past, and past participle all spelled the same: Ex. cut cut cut
Category Two: simple past and past participle spelled the same: Ex. find found found
Category Three: past participle different from simple past: Ex. begin began begun
Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!
Keep learning! Browse the Grammar category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:
Stop making those embarrassing mistakes! Subscribe to Daily Writing Tips today!
- You will improve your English in only 5 minutes per day, guaranteed!
- Subscribers get access to our archives with 800+ interactive exercises!
- You'll also get three bonus ebooks completely free!
