Verbs.pdf — 501 English
She opened the PDF. Page one: “To be: am, is, are, was, were, being, been.” Simple. She yawned. By page 30 ( “To catch: caught, catching” ), her eyes glazed. By page 112 ( “To spring: sprang, sprung” ), she was dreaming of irregular past participles dancing the cha-cha.
Mariana froze. Her cursor moved on its own. The file expanded, swallowing her desktop icons one by one. Suddenly, her room dissolved. She was standing in a gray, infinite void—and in front of her stood a stern-looking, animated letter with tiny feet.
At 2 a.m., the PDF glitched.
Mariana laughed nervously. “That’s the first one in the book.” She took a breath. “I am, you are, he/she/it is, we are, they are. Past: I was, we were. Future: I will be. Present perfect: I have been. Past perfect: I had been. Future perfect: I will have been. Present progressive: I am being. Past progressive: I was being. Present perfect progressive: I have been being…”
“Begin.”
Mariana panicked. “I drink, I drank, I have drunk—no, I have drank ?” Verbius buzzed red. “Incorrect. Drunk is the past participle.” A trapdoor opened beneath her left foot.
Verbius paused. “Acceptable. Next: .” 501 English Verbs.pdf
“Tonight,” she told her cat, Mittens. “Tonight, we conquer tenses.”
The void shattered. Mariana woke up slumped over her keyboard, cheek pressed against the keyboard, drooling on page 401 ( “To wring: wrung” ). The PDF was still open, harmless and static. She opened the PDF