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When do we not add -s to the third person singular in the simple present tense?
—
Hanieh
,
Iran
Answer
The short answer is that, except for modal verbs, the third person singular in the simple present tense always ends in –s: she climbs, he runs, it rains, etc.
Now for a more detailed answer: For the vast majority of verbs, the thirdperson singular in the simple present is formed by adding –s to the main form. Howeverthere are a few spelling rules and irregular verbsto be aware of.
Spelling rules
Add –es instead of –s if the base form ends in -s, -z, -x, -sh, -ch, or the vowel o (but not -oo). This adds an extra syllable to the word in spoken form.
- miss + es = misses He misses her so much.
- veto + es = vetoes She vetoes every idea that I suggest.
Ifthe base form ends in consonant + y, remove the -y and add –ies:
- rely --> relies Tom relies on her.
- worry --> worries My father worries about me.
Irregular verbs
Twovery common irregularverbs that you already know do not follow the rules above(although their third person singular present forms do actually endin –s):
- be --> is
- have-->has
Modals
Finally, as mentioned above, the modal verbs, such as can, must, should, may and might, do not take -s in the third person singular present because, as you probably know, modal verbs do not take endings at all.
- She can speak three languages.
- He must like football a lot.
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