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5
The morphological categories of the verb are interrelated, that is every verb form expresses all these
categories simultaneously.
Formation of verb categories
§ 3. English morphological categories are formed in two ways, synthetically and analytically.
Synthetic or simple forms are those the formal elements of which are to be found within one word from
which they are inseparable. These are the present and the past indefinite affirmative (sing, sings, sang); the non-
perfect common aspect forms of the infinitive, participle I, the gerund, participle II (sing, singing, sung); the
imperative mood (sing!).
Analytical or compound verb forms consist of at least two verbal elements, an auxiliary verb and a notional
verb; the latter is presented by participle I, participle II, or the infinitive.                       
An auxiliary verb is devoid of its lexical meaning, its role is purely grammatical. It may be finite or non-
finite, thus showing whether the whole verb form is finite or non-finite as in:
Jane is singing. 
Someone seems to be singing in the next room.
The auxiliary verbs in English are not numerous, they are seven: to do, to be, to have, shall, will, should,
would.
The notional verb of a compound verb form is always non-finite, it carries the lexical meaning of the whole
verb form.
The analytical verb forms are the forms of the continuous aspect, the perfect forms, the passive forms, the
future forms, the future in the past forms, some forms of the subjunctive mood, the interrogative, negative and
emphatic forms of the present and past indefinite.
The meaning of the analytical form as a whole is the result of the complete fusion of the auxiliary and the
non-finite form.
Morphological composition
§ 4. According to their morphological composition verbs can be divided into simple, derivative, compound
and phrasal.
Simple verbs consist of only one root morpheme: to ask, to build, to come.
Derivative verbs are composed of one root morpheme and one or more derivational morphemes (prefixes
and suffixes). The main verbforming suffixes are -ize, -fy, -en, -ate, as in: to criticize, to justify, to blacken, to
enumerate.
Compound verbs consist of at least two stems: to overgrow, to undertake
Phrasal verbs consist of a verbal stem and an adverbial particle, which is sometimes referred to as
postposition. The adverbial meaning is evident in phrasal verbs of the type to come in, to look out, whereas it is
quite lost in the verbs to give up, to give in, to bring up.
Basic verb forms
§ 5. Among the synthetic verb forms there are those which are used independently and those which are used
to build other verb forms. They are four in number:
the infinitive 
the past indefinite 
participle II 
participle I
-
work, rise; 
-
worked, rose;
-
worked, risen; 
-         working, rising.
The infinitive stem and participles I and II are employed to build other verbal forms.
The past indefinite is the only basic form that is not used to build other forms.
Regular and irregular verbs
§ 6. Owing to the historical development of the verb system the English verbs fall into two groups: regular
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