Crave past tense

3 forms of the verb crave The English verb 'crave' is pronounced as [kreɪv].
Related to: regular verbs.
3 forms of verb crave: Infinitive (crave), Past Simple - (craved), Past Participle - (craved).

Here are the past tense forms of the verb crave

👉 Forms of verb crave in future and past simple and past participle.
❓ What is the past tense of crave.

Crave: Past, Present, and Participle Forms

Base Form Past Simple Past Participle
crave [kreɪv]

craved [kreɪvd]

craved [kreɪvd]

What are the 2nd and 3rd forms of the verb crave?

🎓 What are the past simple, future simple, present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect forms of the base form (infinitive) 'crave'?

Learn the three forms of the English verb 'crave'

  • the first form (V1) is 'crave' used in present simple and future simple tenses.
  • the second form (V2) is 'craved' used in past simple tense.
  • the third form (V3) is 'craved' used in present perfect and past perfect tenses.

What are the past tense and past participle of crave?

The past tense and past participle of crave are: crave in past simple is craved, and past participle is craved.

What is the past tense of crave?

The past tense of the verb "crave" is "craved", and the past participle is "craved".

Verb Tenses

Past simple — crave in past simple craved (V2).
Future simple — crave in future simple is crave (will + V1).
Present Perfect — crave in present perfect tense is craved (have/has + V3).
Past Perfect — crave in past perfect tense is craved (had + V3).

crave regular or irregular verb?

👉 Is 'crave' a regular or irregular verb? The verb 'crave' is regular verb.

Examples of Verb crave in Sentences

  •   Because of him we crave for power, wealth and glory. (Present Simple)
  •   When you crave something sugary, eat a bell pepper. (Present Simple)
  •   You can still crave something you can't have. (Present Simple)
  •   And salvation is all that we crave. (Present Simple)
  •   Medics, students, and ordinary people craved to hear about the drugs that would save the world from senile dementia. (Past Simple)
  •   Because a child's brain, especially before the age of three, is not just craving new experiences. (Present Simple)
  •   His mighty body had already coped with the recent shake-up and craved new adventures. (Past Simple)
  •   Even now, people still crave real order, organization, and discipline, for the times when a thief and a bribe-taker sat in prison, from which neither money nor high connections could save them. (Present Simple)
  •   If we go somewhere, we always crave home, and it seems that nowhere is as good as home. (Present Simple)
  •   The doctor had craved for a worthy audience before whom he could shine his skeptical view of life. (Past Perfect)

Along with crave, words are popular dry up and hang on.

Verbs by letter: r, d, u, c, m, p, b, w, h, a, e, g, s, q, j, l, t, f, o, n, k, i, v, y, z.