The English verb 'skip' is pronounced as [skɪp].
Related to:
regular verbs.
3 forms of verb skip: Infinitive (skip), Past Simple - (skipped), Past Participle - (skipped).
Here are the past tense forms of the verb skip
👉 Forms of verb skip in future and past simple and past participle.
❓ What is the past tense of skip.
Skip: Past, Present, and Participle Forms
Base Form | Past Simple | Past Participle |
---|---|---|
skip [skɪp] |
skipped [skɪpt] |
skipped [skɪpt] |
What are the 2nd and 3rd forms of the verb skip?
🎓 What are the past simple, future simple, present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect forms of the base form (infinitive) 'skip'?
Learn the three forms of the English verb 'skip'
- the first form (V1) is 'skip' used in present simple and future simple tenses.
- the second form (V2) is 'skipped' used in past simple tense.
- the third form (V3) is 'skipped' used in present perfect and past perfect tenses.
What are the past tense and past participle of skip?
The past tense and past participle of skip are: skip in past simple is skipped, and past participle is skipped.
What is the past tense of skip?
The past tense of the verb "skip" is "skipped", and the past participle is "skipped".
Verb Tenses
Past simple — skip in past simple skipped
(V2).
Future simple — skip in future simple is skip (will + V1).
Present Perfect — skip in present perfect tense is
skipped
(have/has + V3).
Past Perfect — skip in past perfect tense is
skipped
(had + V3).
skip regular or irregular verb?
👉 Is 'skip' a regular or irregular verb? The verb 'skip' is regular verb.
Examples of Verb skip in Sentences
- Monica and Paul were so busy they skipped lunch (Past Simple)
- My uncle has been skipped over for the last 12 months! (Past Simple)
- Also, you can't skip breakfast, as it is very important in activating digestion after sleep! (Present Simple)
- He had no incentive to learn, often skipped classes and handed in his written work later than everyone else. (Past Simple)
- She tried to be the best at everything, though sometimes she still had to skip classes. (Past Simple)
- And with these words he ran away to the Christmas table, and at his command the squadron on silver horses began to skip here and there - in all directions, cutting with sabers and firing as much as they liked. (Past Simple)
- If the novelist's fantasy is as tied to plausibility as a horse is to a horse-horse, the novelist's fantasy can skip wherever he wants without the need for bridles, saddles, or stirrups. (Present Simple)
- Thoughts skipped from one thing to another, got confused, broke off, came to a dead end. (Past Simple)
- My thoughts were constantly skipping from one thing to another, and my attention was distracted. (Past Continuous)
- With a black puff of smoke, the little tugboat began to skip up the river. (Past Simple)