Trouble past tense

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

Here are the past tense forms of the verb trouble

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

Trouble: Past, Present, and Participle Forms

Base Form Past Simple Past Participle
trouble [ˈtrʌbl]

troubled [ˈtrʌb(ə)ld]

troubled [ˈtrʌb(ə)ld]

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

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

Learn the three forms of the English verb 'trouble'

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

What are the past tense and past participle of trouble?

The past tense and past participle of trouble are: trouble in past simple is troubled, and past participle is troubled.

What is the past tense of trouble?

The past tense of the verb "trouble" is "troubled", and the past participle is "troubled".

Verb Tenses

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

trouble regular or irregular verb?

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

Examples of Verb trouble in Sentences

  •   You have nothing to trouble about today, my friend (Present Simple)
  •   The robot has troubled me greatly (Present Perfect)
  •   I won't trouble you anymore with all these riddles," she said. (Past Simple)
  •   And they trouble our patients a lot, because you can't hide your eyes under clothes like you can't hide your stomach or your chest. (Present Simple)
  •   They didn't want to trouble people by warning them about an earthquake that might not happen. (Past Simple)
  •   At this stage, parents are much more troubled about why this happened in their family. (Present Simple)
  •   While foreign writers were more troubled with how it was written, Russian writers focused on what should be said to the reader. (Past Simple)
  •   And I only held back because I didn't want to trouble Grandpa. (Past Simple)
  •   It wasn't in my plans to trouble the audience that much, and I was confused. (Past Simple)
  •   The speed at which emotions arise considerably troubles the process of managing them at the secondary level. (Present Simple)

Along with trouble, words are popular cheer and trip.

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.