| 11. | All regular verbs, whether weak, strong or mixed, form the present tense in the same way.
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| 12. | Note that the optative singular of contracted verbs usually has rather than the expected of regular verbs.
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| 13. | So the regular verbs are not all the same, but they vary according to a predictable rule.
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| 14. | Unlike the Hebrew examples, these roots conjugate in a manner more like regular verbs, producing no indivisible clusters.
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| 15. | Only the formation of the past tense differs among regular verbs, depending on whether the verb is strong, weak or mixed.
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| 16. | Regular verbs have identical past tense and past participle forms in "-ed ", but there are 100 or so list ).
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| 17. | However, for nearly all regular verbs, a separate " thou " form was no longer commonly used in the past tense.
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| 18. | For regular verbs and even for most irregular verbs ( all but " be " ? ) they are now the same.
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| 19. | This is the second-largest group of regular verbs in the Catalan language ( about 10 percent of verbs in the dictionary ).
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| 20. | :: " Get your [ verb ] on " is a productive ( if really annoying ) slang way to replace any regular verb.
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