The document discusses the three different pronunciations of the final "-ed" sound in regular past tense and past participle verbs in English: /t/ is used after p, f, and v sounds; /d/ is used after all other consonants and vowel sounds; and /id/ is used after t and d sounds. It then lists a series of verbs and asks the reader to classify them according to their final "-ed" pronunciation into the three categories.
The document discusses the three different pronunciations of the final "-ed" sound in regular past tense and past participle verbs in English: /t/ is used after p, f, and v sounds; /d/ is used after all other consonants and vowel sounds; and /id/ is used after t and d sounds. It then lists a series of verbs and asks the reader to classify them according to their final "-ed" pronunciation into the three categories.
The document discusses the three different pronunciations of the final "-ed" sound in regular past tense and past participle verbs in English: /t/ is used after p, f, and v sounds; /d/ is used after all other consonants and vowel sounds; and /id/ is used after t and d sounds. It then lists a series of verbs and asks the reader to classify them according to their final "-ed" pronunciation into the three categories.
You must always hear the final ed at the end of a regular verb (preterit
form or past participle). There are 3 different pronunciations possible
[ t ] after P F !" laughed # tal$ed [ id] after T % !" wanted # decided [ d ] after the other consonants# vowels and diphthongs !" remembered# cleaned &ow classify the following verbs according to the pronunciation of the final 'ed
he helped he loo$ed he decided he li$ed he stopped he started he washed he closed he tasted he moved he pushed he sounded he loved he wanted he (umped he played he recorded he invented he wor$ed he changed he added he collected he listened he escaped he interviewed it rained he needed he travelled he received he acted he answered he wondered he as$ed he shouted he accepted he chatted [ t ] [ d ] [ id ]