Is "be" a weak or a strong verb?

Status
Not open for further replies.

bester

Member
Joined
Oct 25, 2011
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Polish
Home Country
Poland
Current Location
Poland
Given the definition

Weak verbs - a weak verb is one that has a –d, -ed, or- t ending for its past tense.
Strong verbs – a strong verb is the one which forms its past tense by ablaut (the change of the root vowel, root vowel gradation)

how would you categorize the two following verbs: be, make?

Neither verb quite falls under either definition and I am not sure.
 
I am used to seeing the categories "regular" and "irregular." And "be" is definitely irregular.
 
Not a teacher.

Weak/strong is the Old English category.

Weak verbs = all regular + a lot of irregular. It's not clear-cut.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I would stick with regular and irregular verbs, if I were you. It's the terminology used in grammar books and by the majority of teachers. There is also a clear definition of each one.
 
I'd love to stick to regular/irregular verbs but I can't. I'm sitting an exam the day after tomorrow and I must find my answer.
 
Well, then, I guess you'll have to go with "strong" if it's what we call "regular" and "weak" if it's anything else. If the past simple of any verb you're presented with doesn't end with -ed, d or t, then you'll have to call it weak, I suppose.

Out of curiosity, what exam is it that you are taking which still uses these terms?
 
For the record, it is the opposite - weak (regular+some irregular) and strong (irregular).

The classes is called History of the English Language :)
 
Apologies - I got them the wrong way round.
 
Yeah, talk about old terminology. The terms weak/strong are a holdover from Old and Middle English grammar, back when English was much more Germanic.

The terms weak and strong come from German grammar, where verbs are either weak (regular), strong (irregular), or a 3rd mixed option of irregular weak.

Strong verbs in German have vowel changes in the root/stem in various tenses, which is where all those drastic past and past participle changes in English irregular verbs like 'sing sang sung' come from.

German mixed verbs morphed into those less drastic irregular modern English verbs like 'eat ate eaten'

And, as others have said, the weak verbs roughly correspond to English regular verbs.

I didn't think it was still used anymore for English grammar. As I recall, the idea was something like weak verbs were too weak to form a past tense without leaning on some kind of ending 'crutch', while a strapping hearty strong verb, haven eaten its Wheaties for breakfast, could flex it's congugational muscles and form a whole new word for the past tense. It didn't need no stinking tense ending.

That's probably paraphrased somewhat....
 
Last edited:
The class[STRIKE]es[/STRIKE] is called History of the English Language. [STRIKE]:)[/STRIKE]
This tells us nothing about who runs the course or why you need to take an exam.
 
How would you categorize the two following verbs: be, make?



***** NOT A TEACHER *****


I offer the following information only for the thoughtful consideration of interested members.

One scholar uses the terms "weak" and "strong" in a sense that is different from "regular" and "irregular."

I have NO idea whether this information applies to the OP's examination question. (It probably does NOT.)

I thought, however, that this information should at least be added to the discussion. Learners might like to know that "weak" does not always necessarily mean "regular."


*****


The scholar writes that the "differentiation between strong verbs and weak verbs can be quite subjective and is rather elusive. It would, perhaps, be easier to define the two terms usng a number of strong and weak verbs."

The scholar then cites another scholar who claims that weak verbs include the various forms of "to be" and the verbs "do," "make," "provide," and "include."

Weak verbs say little, if anything, and result in the reader having to spend more time "deciphering meaning than reading it."


Source: Jody Byrne, Technical Translation (2006). (Accessed through the "books" section of Google.)
 
Last edited:
This sounds like trying to force English verbs into unnatural categories. Be fits neither definition. However, it fits the regular/irregular categorisation easily. I have only come across weak/strong as alternatives to regular/irregular before now.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top