Auxiliary and Main Verbs: The Logic of Tense and Negation
Master the distinction between helping (auxiliary) and main verbs. Learn to construct tenses, negations, and questions correctly for SSC and Banking exams.
The Engine and the Signalman of a Sentence
Every English sentence you read in a newspaper or an exam paper is powered by a verb. As we saw in the previous lesson on Dummy Subjects, while Pronouns act as substitutes for people and things, Verbs are the words that describe what those people or things are doing.
Think of a sentence like a locomotive train. To move the train, you need two things: a powerful engine to pull the weight and a signalman to guide the direction. In English grammar, the engine is the Main Verb, and the signalman is the Auxiliary Verb.
In this lesson, we will break down how these two types of verbs work together to create tenses, ask questions, and form negative statements - skills that are essential for scoring high in the Error Spotting sections of SSC and Banking exams.
Understanding the Core Action: Main Verbs
Before we look at helping verbs, let us understand what a Main Verb is. When you think of a word like run, eat, study, or sleep, you are thinking of an action. This action is the heart of the sentence.
A Main Verb (also called a Lexical Verb) carries the actual meaning or the “message” of the sentence. It tells you exactly what is happening.
- Rahul studies for the IBPS PO exam.
ராகுல் IBPS PO தேர்விற்காகப் படிக்கிறார் (studies). राहुल IBPS PO परीक्षा के लिए पढ़ता (studies) है। - The manager signed the documents.
மேலாளர் ஆவணங்களில் கையெழுத்திட்டார் (signed). मैनेजर ने दस्तावेजों पर हस्ताक्षर किए (signed)। - They bought a new laptop.
அவர்கள் ஒரு புதிய லேப்டாப் வாங்கினார்கள் (bought). उन्होंने एक नया लैपटॉप खरीदा (bought)।
In these sentences, studies, signed, and bought are the main verbs. They can often stand alone without any help.
The Experience of State
Sometimes, a verb does not show a physical action. Instead, it describes a state or a condition.
- She is a bank officer.
அவள் ஒரு வங்கி அதிகாரி ஆவாள் (is). वह एक बैंक अधिकारी है (is)। - We are happy with the results.
முடிவுகளைக் கண்டு நாம் மகிழ்ச்சியாக இருக்கிறோம் (are). हम परिणामों से खुश हैं (are)।
Here, is and are are also main verbs because they are the only verbs in the sentence, describing a state of being.
Analogy · The Light Bulb and the Switch Expand analogy
Think of a Main Verb like a light bulb. It provides the actual light (the meaning). The Auxiliary Verb is like the switch or the dimmer. It doesn’t provide light itself, but it controls when the light turns on (tense) or how bright it is (mood).
The Support System: Auxiliary (Helping) Verbs
An Auxiliary Verb does not show an action on its own. Its only job is to “help” the main verb. It provides extra information about when an action happened (tense) or how the speaker feels about it (mood).
There are three main groups of helping verbs you must master: Primary Auxiliaries, Modal Auxiliaries, and the rules of Subject-Auxiliary Agreement.
1. Primary Auxiliaries: Be, Do, and Have
| Verb | Usage as a Helper | Example | Usage as a Main Verb |
|---|---|---|---|
| Be | To show ongoing actions. | He is preparing for exams. | She is (exists as) a bank officer. |
| Do | To ask questions or negate. | Do you understand? | I do (perform) my homework. |
| Have | To show completed actions. | I have finished the chapter. | They have (possess) a new car. |
2. Subject-Auxiliary Agreement
In the Error Spotting section, you will often find sentences where the auxiliary verb does not match the subject. You must follow these logic rules:
- Singular Subjects (He, She, It, Rahul, The Manager) take singular auxiliaries: is, was, does, has.
ஒருமை எழுவாய்கள் (Singular Subjects): He, She, It, Rahul, The Manager போன்றவை ஒருமைத் துணை வினைச்சொற்களை எடுக்கின்றன: is, was, does, has. एकवचन कर्ता (Singular Subjects): He, She, It, Rahul, The Manager आदि एकवचन सहायक क्रियाएँ लेते हैं: is, was, does, has। - Plural Subjects (They, We, You, The Managers) take plural auxiliaries: are, were, do, have.
பன்மை எழுவாய்கள் (Plural Subjects): They, We, You, The Managers போன்றவை பன்மைத் துணை வினைச்சொற்களை எடுக்கின்றன: are, were, do, have. बहुवचन कर्ता (Plural Subjects): They, We, You, The Managers आदि बहुवचन सहायक क्रियाएँ लेते हैं: are, were, do, have।
The Collective Noun Trap
For SSC and Banking exams, pay special attention to these two groups:
- Singular Entities: Words like Team, Committee, Board, or Staff are treated as a single unit and take singular verbs. (e.g., The team has submitted its report).
ஒருமை அமைப்புகள் (Singular Entities): Team, Committee, Board அல்லது Staff போன்ற வார்த்தைகள் ஒற்றை அலகாகக் கருதப்படுகின்றன, எனவே இவை ஒருமை வினைச்சொற்களை எடுக்கின்றன. एकवचन इकाइयाँ (Singular Entities): Team, Committee, Board, या Staff जैसे शब्दों को एक इकाई माना जाता है और इनके साथ एकवचन क्रिया का प्रयोग होता है। - The “Police” Exception: The word Police is always treated as plural. (e.g., The police have arrested the thief).
“Police” விதிவிலக்கு (The Police Exception): Police என்ற வார்த்தை எப்போதும் பன்மையாகவே கருதப்படுகிறது. “Police” अपवाद (The Police Exception): Police शब्द को हमेशा बहुवचन माना जाता है। (उदाहरण: The police have arrested the thief)।
3. Modal Auxiliaries: Ability and Permission
- You must carry your Admit Card to the exam hall. (Necessity)
நீங்கள் உங்கள் Admit Card-ஐத் தேர்வு அறைக்குக் கட்டாயம் (must) கொண்டு வர வேண்டும். (அவசியம்) आपको परीक्षा हॉल में अपना एडमिट कार्ड अवश्य (must) ले जाना चाहिए। (अनिवार्यता) - She can speak three languages fluently. (Ability)
அவளால் சரளமாக மூன்று மொழிகளைப் பேச முடியும் (can). (திறன்) वह धाराप्रवाह तीन भाषाएं बोल सकती (can) है। (क्षमता)
Important Exam Rule: Modals are always followed by the base form of the verb (V1). You should never use an “-s”, “-ing”, or “-ed” form immediately after a modal.
- Incorrect: He can goes there.
தவறானது: He can goes there. गलत: He can goes there. - Correct: He can go there.
சரியானது: He can go there. सही: He can go there.
Constructing Negations and Questions
In many regional languages, you can make a sentence negative simply by adding a word like “not.” In English, you almost always need a “helping verb” to hold the word “not.”
The Power of ‘Do’, ‘Does’, and ‘Did'
When a sentence in the Simple Present or Simple Past tense does not have a helping verb, we must “borrow” one to make it negative or to ask a question.
- Statement: He likes coffee.
வாக்கியம்: அவருக்குக் காபி பிடிக்கும். वाक्य: उसे कॉफी पसंद है। - Negative: He does not like coffee. (Notice how ‘likes’ becomes ‘like’)
எதிர்மறை: அவருக்குக் காபி பிடிக்காது (does not like)… नकारात्मक: उसे कॉफी पसंद नहीं है (does not like)। (ध्यान दें कि कैसे ‘likes’, ‘like’ में बदल गया) - Question: Does he like coffee?
வினா: அவருக்குக் காபி பிடிக்குமா (Does he like)? प्रश्न: क्या उसे कॉफी पसंद है (Does he like)?
Critical Rule for SSC/Banking: When you use does or did, the main verb must return to its simplest form (V1). Using a past tense verb with ‘did’ is the most frequent error tested in exams.
- Incorrect: He did not went to the bank.
தவறானது: He did not went to the bank. गलत: He did not went to the bank. - Correct: He did not go to the bank.
சரியானது: He did not go to the bank. सही: He did not go to the bank.
Mastering Verb Conjugation: The Irregular Verb Table
To succeed in “Voice Change” and “Tense Transformation” questions, you must know the different forms of verbs. While “regular” verbs just add “-ed” (like walk becomes walked), Irregular Verbs change their spelling entirely.
Mastering these forms is a non-negotiable requirement for competitive exams.
| V1 (Base Form) | V2 (Simple Past) | V3 (Past Participle) | Usage Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arise | Arose | Arisen | To begin or occur |
| Become | Became | Become | V1 and V3 are same |
| Begin | Began | Begun | Frequently tested |
| Break | Broke | Broken | Used in Passive Voice |
| Choose | Chose | Chosen | Note the spelling change |
| Come | Came | Come | V1 and V3 are same |
| Do | Did | Done | Helper and Main Verb |
| Drink | Drank | Drunk | Common spelling error |
| Eat | Ate | Eaten | Basic action |
| Fly | Flew | Flown | Irregular pattern |
| Forget | Forgot | Forgotten | Double ‘t’ in V3 |
| Give | Gave | Given | Basic action |
| Go | Went | Gone | Always used with ‘have/has’ in V3 |
| Know | Knew | Known | Silent ‘k’ |
| Ring | Rang | Rung | Pattern: i - a - u |
| Run | Ran | Run | V1 and V3 are same |
| See | Saw | Seen | Visual action |
| Sing | Sang | Sung | Pattern: i - a - u |
| Speak | Spoke | Spoken | Note the ‘o’ shift |
| Swim | Swam | Swum | Pattern: i - a - u |
| Take | Took | Taken | Common in exams |
| Tear | Tore | Torn | Note the spelling |
| Throw | Threw | Thrown | Note the ‘w’ |
| Wear | Wore | Worn | Note the spelling |
| Write | Wrote | Written | Double ‘t’ in V3 |
Common Exam Pitfalls
Examiners often create questions where they mix up these verb forms. Here is a checklist of what to avoid:
- Double Past Tense: Never use ‘did’ with a V2 (past tense) verb. (e.g., Did he reached? is wrong; Did he reach? is right).
இரட்டை இறந்த காலம்: ‘did’ உடன் V2 (Past Tense) வினைச்சொல்லை ஒருபோதும் பயன்படுத்த வேண்டாம். डबल पास्ट टेंस (Double Past Tense): ‘did’ के साथ कभी भी V2 (past tense) क्रिया का प्रयोग न करें। (उदाहरण: Did he reached? गलत है; Did he reach? सही है)। - Has/Have Mistakes: Always use the V3 (Past Participle) after has, have, or had. (e.g., I have wrote is wrong; I have written is right).
Has/Have பிழைகள்: Has, have அல்லது had க்குப் பிறகு எப்போதும் V3 (Past Participle) வடிவத்தையே பயன்படுத்தவும். Has/Have की गलतियाँ: has, have, या had के बाद हमेशा V3 (Past Participle) का प्रयोग करें। (उदाहरण: I have wrote गलत है; I have written सही है)। - Modal Confusion: Never add ‘s’ or ‘es’ to a verb after a modal. (e.g., She can sings is wrong; She can sing is right).
Modal குழப்பம்: ஒரு மோடுலுக்குப் பின்னால் வரும் வினைச்சொல்லில் ‘s’ அல்லது ‘es’ ஐ ஒருபோதும் சேர்க்க வேண்டாம். मॉडल का भ्रम (Modal Confusion): मॉडल के बाद क्रिया में कभी भी ‘s’ या ‘es’ न जोड़ें। (उदाहरण: She can sings गलत है; She can sing सही है)। - Double Modals: Never use two modal verbs together. (e.g., He should must go is wrong; He must go is right).
இரட்டை மோடுல்கள் (Double Modals): இரண்டு மோடுல் வினைச்சொற்களை ஒன்றாகப் பயன்படுத்த வேண்டாம். डबल मॉडल्स (Double Modals): कभी भी दो मॉडल क्रियाओं का एक साथ उपयोग न करें। (उदाहरण: He should must go गलत है; He must go सही है)। - Modals in the Past: To talk about the past with a modal, use ‘have’ + V3. (e.g., He should have gone). Never use a past tense verb directly after a modal.
கடந்த கால மோடுல்கள்: ஒரு மோடுல் மூலம் கடந்த காலத்தைப் பற்றிப் பேச ‘have’ + V3 ஐப் பயன்படுத்தவும். अतीत में मॉडल का प्रयोग: मॉडल के साथ अतीत (past) के बारे में बात करने के लिए, ‘have’ + V3 का उपयोग करें। (उदाहरण: He should have gone)। मॉडल के ठीक बाद कभी भी पास्ट टेंस क्रिया का प्रयोग न करें। - Helping Verb Omission: In negative sentences and questions, you cannot skip the helping verb if the main verb is an action. (e.g., You not like it? is wrong; Do you not like it? is right).
உதவும் வினைச்சொல்லைத் தவிர்த்தல்: எதிர்மறை மற்றும் வினா வாக்கியங்களில், முக்கியமான வினைச்சொல் ஒரு செயலாக இருந்தால், உதவும் வினைச்சொல்லைத் தவிர்க்க முடியாது. सहायक क्रिया का लोप (Helping Verb Omission): नकारात्मक वाक्यों और प्रश्नों में, यदि मुख्य क्रिया कोई कार्य है, तो आप सहायक क्रिया को छोड़ नहीं सकते। (उदाहरण: You not like it? गलत है; Do you not like it? सही है)।
Key Takeaways
- Main Verbs carry the primary action or state, while Auxiliary Verbs provide grammatical support like tense and mood.
Main Verbs முதன்மையான செயல் அல்லது நிலையைத் தாங்குகின்றன… Main Verbs मुख्य कार्य या स्थिति को दर्शाती हैं, जबकि Auxiliary Verbs टेंस और मूड जैसी व्याकरणिक सहायता प्रदान करती हैं। - Primary Auxiliaries (Be, Do, Have) can function both as helping verbs and as independent main verbs.
Primary Auxiliaries (Be, Do, Have) உதவும் வினைச்சொற்களாகவும் தனித்த வினைச்சொற்களாகவும் செயல்பட முடியும். Primary Auxiliaries (Be, Do, Have) सहायक क्रिया और स्वतंत्र मुख्य क्रिया दोनों के रूप में कार्य कर सकती हैं। - Modal Auxiliaries (Can, Should, Must) never change their form and are always followed by the base verb (V1).
Modal Auxiliaries (Can, Should, Must) ஒருபோதும் அவற்றின் வடிவத்தை மாற்றிக்கொள்வதில்லை… Modal Auxiliaries (Can, Should, Must) कभी अपना रूप नहीं बदलते और उनके बाद हमेशा क्रिया का मूल रूप (V1) आता है। - In negative and interrogative sentences using Do, Does, or Did, the main verb must always be in its simplest base form (V1).
Do, Does அல்லது Did ஐப் பயன்படுத்தும் எதிர்மறை மற்றும் வினா வாக்கியங்களில்… Do, Does, या Did का उपयोग करने वाले नकारात्मक और प्रश्नवाचक वाक्यों में, मुख्य क्रिया हमेशा अपने सबसे सरल मूल रूप (V1) में होनी चाहिए। - Memorizing Irregular Verb forms (V1, V2, V3) is essential for solving Sentence Improvement and Voice Change questions.
வாக்கிய மேம்பாடு (Sentence Improvement) மற்றும் Voice Change கேள்விகளைத் தீர்க்க Irregular Verb வடிவங்களை (V1, V2, V3) மனப்பாடம் செய்வது மிகவும் அவசியம். Sentence Improvement और Voice Change के प्रश्नों को हल करने के लिए Irregular Verb रूपों (V1, V2, V3) को याद करना बहुत आवश्यक है। - In the next lesson, we will explore the difference between Transitive and Intransitive Verbs and how they determine the use of Objects and enable the Passive Voice.
அடுத்த பாடத்திட்டத்திலே, Transitive மற்றும் Intransitive வினைச்சொற்களுக்கு இடையே உள்ள வேறுபாட்டையும் அவை செயப்படுபொருட்களின் (Objects) பயன்பாட்டை எவ்வாறு தீர்மானிக்கின்றன என்பதையும், Passive Voice ஐ எவ்வாறு செயல்படுத்துகின்றன என்பதையும் ஆராய்வோம். अगले पाठ में, हम Transitive और Intransitive Verbs के बीच के अंतर को समझेंगे और देखेंगे कि वे ऑब्जेक्ट्स (Objects) के उपयोग को कैसे निर्धारित करते हैं और Passive Voice को कैसे संभव बनाते हैं।
Check Your Understanding
Test your knowledge with these practice questions
Auxiliary and Main Verbs - Practice Quiz
Test your understanding of helping verbs, modal auxiliaries, and irregular verb conjugations with this exam-oriented practice set.
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