Generate past tense

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

Here are the past tense forms of the verb generate

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

Generate: Past, Present, and Participle Forms

Base Form Past Simple Past Participle
generate ['ʤenəreɪt]

generated [ˈdʒenəreɪtɪd]

generated [ˈdʒenəreɪtɪd]

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

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

Learn the three forms of the English verb 'generate'

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

What are the past tense and past participle of generate?

The past tense and past participle of generate are: generate in past simple is generated, and past participle is generated.

What is the past tense of generate?

The past tense of the verb "generate" is "generated", and the past participle is "generated".

Verb Tenses

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

generate regular or irregular verb?

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

Examples of Verb generate in Sentences

  •   The brain is capable of generating ideas, and if you do it right, you can turn your dreams into reality, you just have to make the effort. (Present Simple)
  •   Books are a concentration of knowledge that causes the brain to generate many new ideas. (Present Simple)
  •   The human mind is capable of generating ideas that have never before occurred to anyone. (Present Simple)
  •   The threat of being abandoned by loved ones generates a fear of loneliness. (Present Simple)
  •   Conflicting assertions generate many new answers and perspectives on life. (Present Simple)
  •   The exorbitant complexity of life generated a sense of powerlessness and anger among the population (Past Simple)
  •   Noise generates noise, and the lone voice of the scholar drowns in the chorus of a thousand ignoramuses. (Present Simple)
  •   He did all this leisurely, clearly trying to generate as much noise as possible. (Past Simple)
  •   In this case, the body begins to generate new enzymes and juices, as a result of which the digestion process slows down. (Present Simple)
  •   If people are able to generate more ideas or modify the process of generating them, the quality of creative work will improve. (Present Simple)

Along with generate, words are popular dump and faint.

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.