Contributor: Melissa LaRusso. Lesson ID: 12783
Poor "Ed"! He's always at the end, and he never gets presents! We're talking about the letters "ed" that go at the end of verbs to make them past tense. Learn the sounds ed makes and how they change!
Do you know "Ed"? He makes different sounds on different words. What three sounds does "ed" make?
The letters "ed" can be added to the end of a word to make a suffix.
A suffix is added to the end of a word to change its meaning. When you add the letters "ed" to the end of a word, that changes the tense of the word from present tense to past tense. Take a look at the word "walk." If you add the letters "ed" to the end of the word "walk," it becomes "walked."
Now read the words "walk" and "walked" in the following sentences:
You can see that the word "walked" means that it already happened in the past.
Now that you understand that the letters "ed" are added to the end of a word to change the tense of the word, you will explore the three sounds that "ed" makes.
Now, ed makes three sounds. How do you know which sound ed makes in a word? Follow these three rules:
Watch the video, Nessy Spelling Strategy: ed and Letter T to learn more about the sounds of ed:
Continue on to the Got It? section for some interactive practice!