List Of Irregular Verbs Pdf With Uzbek Translation ((better)) -

The Ultimate Guide to English Irregular Verbs: Free PDF List with Uzbek Translation

Learning English is an exciting journey, but for Uzbek speakers, one of the biggest hurdles is mastering irregular verbs. Unlike regular verbs that simply add “-ed” for the past tense, irregular verbs change their form completely. Memorizing them is essential, which is why having a list of irregular verbs PDF with Uzbek translation is a game-changer.

be — was/were — been — bo‘lmoq — (state/existence)
become — became — become — bo‘lish, aylanish
begin — began — begun — boshlamoq
break — broke — broken — sindirmoq, sindi
bring — brought — brought — olib kelmoq
build — built — built — qurmoq
buy — bought — bought — sotib olmoq
catch — caught — caught — ushlamoq
choose — chose — chosen — tanlamoq
come — came — come — kelmoq
cost — cost — cost — bahosi bo‘lmoq
cut — cut — cut — kesmoq
do — did — done — qilmoq
draw — drew — drawn — chizmoq
drink — drank — drunk — ichmoq
drive — drove — driven — haydash
eat — ate — eaten — yemoq
fall — fell — fallen — yiqilmoq, tushmoq
feel — felt — felt — his qilmoq
find — found — found — topmoq
fly — flew — flown — uchmoq
forget — forgot — forgotten — unutmoq
get — got — gotten/got — olish, yetib kelmoq
give — gave — given — bermoq
go — went — gone — bor/moq
grow — grew — grown — o‘smoq, o‘sitmoq
have — had — had — ega bo‘lmoq
hear — heard — heard — eshitmoq
hold — held — held — ushlamoq
keep — kept — kept — saqlamoq
know — knew — known — bilmoq
lead — led — led — boshqarmoq, yetaklamoq
leave — left — left — tark etmoq
lend — lent — lent — qarz bermoq
let — let — let — ruxsat bermoq
lie — lay — lain — yotmoq (NOTE: lie = yotmoq; lay = qo‘yish — different verb)
lose — lost — lost — yo‘qotmoq
make — made — made — yaratmoq, qilish
mean — meant — meant — anglatmoq
meet — met — met — uchrashmoq
pay — paid — paid — to‘lamoq
put — put — put — qo‘yish
read — read /rɛd/ — read /rɛd/ — o‘qimoq (pronunciation differs)
ride — rode — ridden — minmoq (velosiped/ot)
ring — rang — rung — qo‘ng‘iroq qilmoq
run — ran — run — yugurmoq
say — said — said — aytmoq
see — saw — seen — ko‘rmoq
sell — sold — sold — sotmoq
send — sent — sent — yubormoq
set — set — set — o‘rnatmoq, qo‘yish
shake — shook — shaken — silkimoq
shine — shone — shone — nur sochmoq
shoot — shot — shot — otmoq (qurol), suratga olmoq
show — showed — shown — ko‘rsatmoq
sing — sang — sung — kuylamoq
sit — sat — sat — o‘tirmoq
sleep — slept — slept — uxlamoq
speak — spoke — spoken — gapirmoq
spend — spent — spent — sarflash, o‘tkazmoq
stand — stood — stood — turmoq, tik turmoq
steal — stole — stolen — o‘g‘irlash
swim — swam — swum — suzmoq
take — took — taken — olmoq
teach — taught — taught — o‘rgatmoq
tell — told — told — aytmoq
think — thought — thought — o‘ylamoq
throw — threw — thrown — uloqtirmoq
understand — understood — understood — tushunmoq
wake — woke — woken — uyg‘otmoq
wear — wore — worn — kiymoq
win — won — won — yutmoq
write — wrote — written — yozmoq list of irregular verbs pdf with uzbek translation

Sample Exercises Using You Uzbek Translation PDF

Once you download the PDF, practice with these bilingual drills: The Ultimate Guide to English Irregular Verbs: Free

Translate Back and Forth: Look at the Uzbek word (e.g., Sotib olmoq) and try to recall all three English forms (Buy, Bought, Bought). Ring, Sing, Spring, Begin (all change to -ang, -ung)

  • Pronunciation: Many PDFs do not show pronunciation. Use a tool like Google Translate or an Oxford Learner's Dictionary to hear the audio. The vowel sounds change often (e.g., Read sounds like "Reed" in present, but "Red" in past).
  • 5 Tips for Uzbek Speakers to Master Irregular Verbs

    1. Daily Audio Repetition: Listen to the pronunciation. Uzbek is phonetic; English is not. The PDF includes a QR code to an audio playlist.
    2. Color Code by Group: Print the PDF and highlight Group 1 in green, Group 2 in yellow, etc.
    3. Use Sticky Notes: Write the Uzbek meaning on one side and the three English forms on the other. Stick them around your house ("Eshik" = Open/Opened/Opened).
    4. The "Men ..." Trick: Practice saying "Men bugun ..." (Today I...) vs "Men kecha ..." (Yesterday I...).