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  1. Jul 16, 2020 · The present tense of beat is "beat," and the past tense of beat is also "beat." All usages of this word are pronounced the same way: bēt (beet) Also, natural English speakers would more often use the phrase "beat up," rather than "beat" alone, because "beat" could be used for its second definition of:

  2. May 12, 2014 · The pronunciation /bet/ for the past-tense form of beat seems to be fairly old—it goes back at least two centuries. It seems it was associated with Irish English at one point. Walker's Critical Pronouncing Dictionary (1791) says the following in the entry for the verb "to beat":

  3. Mar 16, 2014 · The standard spelling for both the present and the past tense is "beat"—as far as I know, this doesn't change for people who use the pronunciation /bɛt/ for the past tense. The existence of accents that use the pronunciation /bɛt/ for the past tense of beat does not seem to be widely known among speakers who use the pronunciation /biːt/ for both past and present tense.

  4. Sep 23, 2014 · Beat up is a phrasal verb with the completive up particle; it means 'beat to submission' and refers to the results as well as the action. It's an idiom common with children. For the slang category you request, you're almost on the money; but some other lexical changes might improve it: He was a kid that got beat up a lot. That sounds normal to me.

  5. Dec 13, 2017 · My gut response would yes to the first, no to the second. Linguistically, proper English is whatever phrase makes sense and sounds right to a native speaker, so I would say that "So I suppose Editor Bot of Tomorrow has me beaten there" conveys the same meaning, as it is already clear in the first sentence that "beat" is past tense due to the presence of "has."

  6. Jan 9, 2021 · The standard past tense form of post is posted. There are some verbs ending in [st] where standard English uses a past tense form ending in [st] (it is possible to analyze this as a simplification of [stt], with [t] as an irregular past tense marker instead of the syllabic [əd] that regularly appears with verbs ending in [t] or [d]).

  7. " Beat someone to the punch/Beat someone to the draw". I know their meaning, but I am confused about the grammatical usage. Here are two examples from freedictionary. I wanted to have the new car, but Sally beat me to the punch. I planned to write a book about using the new software program, but someone else beat me to the draw

  8. The past tense is "synced". "Sunk" is the past tense of "sink" which sounds the same but is a completely different word. "Synced" appears to have made its way into dictionaries: Merriam-Webster; Wiktionary; TheFreeDictionary; Dictionary.com; and I am sure many others; Edit: As others have pointed out, "synch" and "synched" are acceptable variants.

  9. Jun 29, 2017 · The answer seems simple. If verbs form a past tense according to a pattern, they could not be "irregular". They would form a class of verbs conforming to that pattern. Perhaps some of these "irregular" verbs did, in the past, form the past tense conforming to a pattern.

  10. May 14, 2014 · The preterite perfect ("had painted") has two past-tenses in it: the preterite "had", and the perfect construction "have/has/had painted". One past tense is used to put the situation of the painting into the past time sphere, and one past tense is used for modal remoteness (which happens to be required by the "wish" verb).