What a Web Content Editor Must Know About Irregular Verbs
Verbs are irregular when they take different forms for each tense. This is one of the most important things you as a web content editor must also educate your writers on as well.
An example of an irregular verb would be "blow". The word "blow" is in the present tense, but if you want to change it in past tense then you need to use the word "blew" instead. The future tense remains the same - it always does for all types of verb. You just need to add the word "will" before it.
Now, what if you need to use the word blow in past or present perfect? Perfect tenses refer to actions that have only been recently completed. Present perfect tenses require the word "have" to precede the verb while past perfect tenses require the use of the word "had" as precedent. Generally speaking, perfect tenses use past tense of the verb such as "had talked". But in the case of irregular verbs like "blow", you get to use "had blown" instead.