Tenses
Work across present simple, present continuous, present perfect, and present perfect continuous, and more, until each ending feels natural.
English verb trainer
Practice English verb conjugations across present simple, present continuous, present perfect, and present perfect continuous, and more. Drill 100+ built-in verbs, choose the tenses and pronouns you want, and build recall with interactive typing exercises.
Learn more about PractyRecognizing forms in a chart isn't the same as producing them yourself. Narrow down the drill to what you most need to study.
Practice recall instead of passively reading tables, so the form is there when you need to speak or write.
Choose tenses, pronouns, verbs, or verb types to focus on the patterns that still need work.
Toggle on/off display options for English, including example sentences, so each drill shows the information you want.
Use performance feedback to keep reviewing the forms that are not automatic yet.
Work across present simple, present continuous, present perfect, and present perfect continuous, and more, until each ending feels natural.
Practice across persons and pronouns instead of memorizing one isolated form at a time.
Drill 100+ built-in verbs, then keep practicing the verbs you save from real content.
English conjugation looks simple at first because most present-tense forms are identical, but the auxiliary system is doing a lot of work. Learners have to choose between do, be, have, will, and modal verbs before they even reach the main verb.
The biggest challenge is usually tense and aspect. Simple, continuous, perfect, and perfect continuous forms all describe time differently, and irregular verbs make the past and past participle harder to predict.
Use the present simple for habits, routines, general truths, and stative meanings.
Example: work
I work
you work
he/she/it works
we work
they work
Example: study
I study
you study
he/she/it studies
we study
they study
Example: watch
I watch
you watch
he/she/it watches
we watch
they watch
Use the present continuous for actions happening now or temporary situations.
Example: work
I am working
you are working
he/she/it is working
we are working
they are working
Example: make
I am making
you are making
he/she/it is making
we are making
they are making
Example: run
I am running
you are running
he/she/it is running
we are running
they are running
Use the past simple for completed past actions and finished time periods.
Example: work
I worked
you worked
he/she/it worked
we worked
they worked
Example: live
I lived
you lived
he/she/it lived
we lived
they lived
Example: study
I studied
you studied
he/she/it studied
we studied
they studied
Use will plus the base verb for predictions, promises, and future decisions.
Example: work
I will work
you will work
he/she/it will work
we will work
they will work
Example: live
I will live
you will live
he/she/it will live
we will live
they will live
Example: go
I will go
you will go
he/she/it will go
we will go
they will go
Use the present perfect for past actions connected to the present, experience, or unfinished time.
Example: work
I have worked
you have worked
he/she/it has worked
we have worked
they have worked
Example: study
I have studied
you have studied
he/she/it has studied
we have studied
they have studied
Example: write
I have written
you have written
he/she/it has written
we have written
they have written
Use the present perfect continuous for actions that started in the past and are still continuing or recently stopped.
Example: work
I have been working
you have been working
he/she/it has been working
we have been working
they have been working
Example: make
I have been making
you have been making
he/she/it has been making
we have been making
they have been making
Example: run
I have been running
you have been running
he/she/it has been running
we have been running
they have been running
Yes. Practy is a English conjugation practice app and verb trainer. Drill 100+ verbs across every tense, mood, and person, with the most common forms surfaced first.
Practy gives you practice producing the form after you have read the explanation. That helps when you know the rule but still pause before choosing present perfect or past simple.
Yes. Irregular verbs are a good fit for focused review because they do not follow a single ending pattern. Drill them separately when forms like went, gone, saw, and seen start blending together.
Make English conjugations automatic across every tense and verb.
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