What are the three forms of learn?

Conjugation of verb ‘Learn’

V1 Base Form (Infinitive): To Learn
V2 Past Simple: Learnt/Learned
V3 Past Participle: Learnt/Learned
V4 3rd Person Singular: Learns
V5 Present Participle/Gerund: Learning

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Also, have learned or had learned?

“Learned” is the past tense of “learn,” so you don’t need “had.”

People also ask, is it learnt or learned in the UK? Learned as an Adjective

As an adjective, ‘learned’ is pronounced with two syllables (i.e. learn-ed), whereas the verb form is pronounced as a single syllable. And when you’re using this word as an adjective, there is only one correct spelling in both UK and US English: it is always ‘learned’, never ‘learnt’.

Likewise, what is past participle?

In English grammar, the past participle refers to an action that was started and completed entirely in the past. It is the third principal part of a verb, created by adding -ed, -d, or -t to the base form of a regular verb.

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