What’s is a irregular verb

An irregular verb is a verb in which the past tense and past participle do not follow the regular pattern of adding "-ed" or "-d" to the base form of the verb. Irregular verbs have their own unique forms for past tense and past participle. Examples of irregular verbs include "go" (past tense: went, past participle: gone), "eat" (past tense: ate, past participle: eaten), and "write" (past tense: wrote, past participle: written).

An irregular verb is a verb that does not follow the regular conjugation patterns found in most verbs. These verbs have unique forms for their past tense, past participle, and sometimes other forms as well. Examples of irregular verbs in English include "go" (past tense: went, past participle: gone), "be" (past tense: was/were, past participle: been), and "have" (past tense: had, past participle: had).