This list of basic verbs gives plain meanings and short sample lines so you can build cleaner sentences faster.
Verbs do the heavy lifting in English. They show what happens, what changes, what someone feels, and what a thing is. If your verbs feel shaky, your whole sentence can wobble. If your verbs feel solid, your writing sounds clear, even with simple words.
This page is built for quick study and steady recall. You’ll get a starter set, see how each verb works in a sentence, then pick up habits that help you choose the right form while you write or speak right away.
List of Basic Verbs for Daily English Writing
Start here if you want a core set you can reuse in homework, emails, stories, and short talks. The verbs below are common in school writing and daily speech. Each row gives a meaning plus one pattern you’ll meet often.
| Verb | Core Meaning | Common Pattern Or Sample Line |
|---|---|---|
| be | exist, equal, belong | be + adjective: “I am ready.” |
| have | own, hold, experience | have + noun: “We have time.” |
| do | perform an action | do + noun: “She does her work.” |
| make | create, cause | make + noun: “They make a plan.” |
| get | receive, become | get + adjective: “He got tired.” |
| go | move, travel | go + to + place: “We go to class.” |
| come | move toward | come + to + place: “Come to the door.” |
| take | grab, carry, accept | take + noun: “Take a seat.” |
| give | hand over, provide | give + person + noun: “Give him notes.” |
| see | notice with eyes, understand | see + noun: “I see the problem.” |
| know | have knowledge | know + clause: “I know she’s home.” |
| think | form ideas | think + about: “Think about it.” |
| say | speak words | say + that: “She said that…” |
| tell | inform a person | tell + person + noun: “Tell me the story.” |
| ask | request information | ask + person + about: “Ask her about class.” |
| use | apply, operate | use + noun: “Use a pencil.” |
| work | do a job, function | work + on: “Work on the draft.” |
| need | require | need + to + verb: “I need to study.” |
| try | attempt | try + to + verb: “Try to listen.” |
| help | assist | help + person + verb: “Help me carry this.” |
Two notes before you drill the set. Patterns matter as much as meanings. Store a verb with its pattern, and you’ll write faster with fewer slips.
Basic Verb List By Daily Meaning
Memorizing one long column can feel dull. A cleaner way is to sort verbs by what they do in a sentence. These groups also help you pick sharper wording when you revise a paragraph.
Action Verbs you can picture
Action verbs show a clear act. They often take an object, meaning the action lands on something: “read a book,” “open the window,” “build a model.” When you’re stuck, ask, “What did the subject do?” Then pick a verb that matches that act.
- read: read a text, read a chart
- write: write notes, write a report
- open: open a file, open a door
- close: close a tab, close a shop
- build: build a house, build a habit
- break: break a glass, break a rule
Try a quick drill. Pick one noun you meet daily, like “phone” or “notebook.” Write five short lines with five different action verbs. Keep the subject the same.
State verbs that describe how things are
Some verbs don’t show a visible act. They show a state: being, liking, belonging, owning, seeming. These verbs often pair with adjectives or noun phrases. “Be” is the classic state verb, yet others act in a similar way.
- be: be calm, be a student
- seem: seem ready, seem strange
- belong: belong to a group
- contain: contain sugar, contain data
- matter: matter to me
State verbs can make writing sound steady. Still, don’t overuse “be.” When you revise, scan for “is/are/was/were.” Swap a few with action verbs when it fits: “The rule is clear” can shift to “The rule explains the limit.”
Communication verbs for school and work
These verbs show how ideas move between people. They’re handy for essays, presentations, and group tasks. Pay attention to who receives the message. “Tell” and “ask” usually name a person; “say” often does not.
- say: say a word, say that you agree
- tell: tell a friend, tell the truth
- ask: ask a teacher, ask a question
- explain: explain a step, explain a result
- share: share a link, share an idea
- answer: answer a call, answer a test item
If you mix up “say” and “tell,” use this check: if you name the listener right after the verb, “tell” often fits. “Tell me” sounds natural; “say me” does not.
Thinking verbs that show ideas and choices
Thinking verbs help you show reasons and decisions without filler. They can also soften claims. Instead of “This is true,” you can write “I think this is true,” which matches the tone of many school tasks.
- think: think about a topic
- believe: believe a story
- guess: guess the answer
- decide: decide to join
- agree: agree with a point
- choose: choose a book
Use these verbs with care in formal writing. “Guess” can sound casual, while “decide” and “choose” sound direct. When you write an opinion paragraph, mix one thinking verb with one evidence verb like “show” to keep balance.
Movement verbs for directions and stories
Movement verbs show where someone goes and how they get there. “Go” and “come” are basic, yet they don’t show speed or style.
- go: go home, go to school
- come: come here, come back
- walk: walk to the market
- run: run fast, run to catch a bus
- carry: carry a bag
- bring: bring a bottle
“Bring” and “take” can trip learners. Think of the speaker’s point of view. “Bring” moves something toward the speaker. “Take” moves it away. If you’re calling someone to your place, you say, “Bring your notebook.”
If you want a refresher on what counts as a verb and how verbs behave in a sentence, the Cambridge Dictionary page on verbs gives a clear outline.
How To Learn Basic Verbs Without Cramming
Good news: you don’t need marathon study sessions. A small loop, done often, beats one big session. Use this routine for any set of verbs.
Step 1: Learn the base form with one pattern
Don’t study “get” alone. Study “get + noun” and “get + adjective.” That tiny add-on turns a word into something you can write with. Make two short lines for each new verb. Keep them plain.
Step 2: Add one time form
Pick a form you meet in class a lot, like simple present or simple past. Write one line in each form. You’re training yourself to switch forms on command, not just to recite meanings.
Step 3: Use a spaced review card
On one side, write the verb plus a pattern. On the other, write a short line you made. Review for three minutes a day. If you miss one, don’t beat yourself up. Mark it and see it again tomorrow.
Step 4: Mix verbs into short paragraphs
Single sentences are fine at first. Then move to a six-line paragraph. Try a topic like “My study routine.” Use ten verbs from the table. Read it aloud. If a line sounds odd, fix the verb choice first.
For more on verb forms used in common writing tasks, Purdue OWL’s introduction to verb tenses is a solid reference.
Common Verb Forms That Learners Mix Up
English verb forms look small on the page, yet they carry a lot of meaning. These checkpoints will save you from the usual slip-ups.
Third-person singular in the present
With he, she, and it, many verbs take -s: “She writes,” “He runs,” “It works.” Keep a short list of your own common verbs and practice that -s ending. Teachers spot it fast.
Be verbs and subject match
Match the subject with the right form of “be”: I am, you are, he is, we are, they are. In past time, use was or were. Read your sentence once and point to the subject. That move catches most errors.
Verb plus to vs. verb plus -ing
Some verbs lean toward “to”: want to go, plan to study, decide to stop. Others lean toward “-ing”: enjoy reading, keep trying, finish writing. Don’t try to learn each rule at once. Store each verb with the pattern you meet in real sentences.
Common Past Forms For Core Verbs
Many basic verbs take -ed in the past. Some change shape, and those are the ones you should spot early. This table lists common irregular forms you’ll see in reading and writing.
| Base Form | Past Form | Past Participle |
|---|---|---|
| be | was / were | been |
| begin | began | begun |
| come | came | come |
| do | did | done |
| eat | ate | eaten |
| get | got | got / gotten |
| give | gave | given |
| go | went | gone |
| have | had | had |
| know | knew | known |
| make | made | made |
| see | saw | seen |
| take | took | taken |
| think | thought | thought |
| write | wrote | written |
When you study these forms, don’t just chant them. Put them in lines. “I went to school.” “I have gone to school for years.” That switch from past form to past participle is where many learners slip.
Small Practice Sets You Can Reuse All Year
These practice sets fit in a notebook margin. Each one takes five minutes. Rotate them through the week.
Quick swap practice
Write one plain line: “I get a message.” Now rewrite it with five different verbs: receive, send, read, delete, answer. Keep the rest of the line almost the same. You’re training choice, not memorization.
Two-sentence story practice
Write two sentences about a simple event, like missing a bus. Use one movement verb, one thinking verb, and one communication verb. Read it aloud. If it sounds flat, change the verbs, not the nouns.
Error hunt practice
Take a paragraph you wrote last week. Circle each verb. Check three things: does the verb match the subject, does the time match the rest of the paragraph, and does the verb pattern fit the words after it. Fix one thing at a time.
How To Choose The Right Verb When You’re Stuck
When a sentence stalls, the verb is often the reason. Use this checklist.
- Name the action or state. Ask: what happens in this line?
- Pick a basic verb first. Write a simple version that works.
- Upgrade only if it stays clear. Swap one verb and reread the line.
- Check the pattern. Does it want a noun, “to + verb,” or “-ing”?
- Read it out loud. If your mouth trips, fix the verb form.
If you keep a notebook page with this list of basic verbs and add one new verb each week, you’ll see your sentences tighten over time. Stick with short lines, repeat them, and let accuracy build naturally.