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  1. In English grammar, defective verb is a traditional term for a verb that doesn't exhibit all the typical forms of a conventional verb. English modal verbs ( can, could, may, might, must, ought, shall, should, will, and would) are defective in that they lack distinctive third-person singular and nonfinite forms.

  2. The 3 Types of Compound Verb Compound verbs come in one of three forms: (1) A Phrasal Verb A phrasal verb is a multi-word verb made up of a main verb and at least one preposition or a particle that changes the meaning of the verb from the original verb. break up; break away; take away; take out; Read more about phrasal verbs. (2) A Verb with ...

  3. The most commonly recognized [citation needed] defective verbs in English are auxiliary verbs—the class of preterite-present verbs—can/could, may/might, shall/should, must, ought, and will/would (would being a later historical development).

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  5. from English Grammar Today. May: forms. Affirmative (+) form. May comes first in the verb phrase (after the subject and before another verb): It may be possible for him to get home tonight. May can’t be used with another modal verb: This may hurt you. Not: This may could hurt you. or This could may hurt you. Negative (−) form.

  6. The verb form of a compound noun (whether open or hyphenated) most often is spelled with a hyphen (field-test, water-ski, rubber-stamp), whereas a verb derived from a solid noun is written solid (mastermind, brainstorm, sideline). That one's simple enough.

  7. The most commonly recognized defective verbs in English are auxiliary verbs — the class of preterite-present verbs — can/could, may/might, shall/should, must, ought to, and will/would (would being a later historical development).

  8. Defective Verbs in English language are – can, may, must, ought, should. Common characteristics of these verbs: 1. They have not all verb forms. 2 .Do not take s in the third person of the present tense singular. I can. I may. I must. I ought.

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