Master Verbs for SSC
Verbs are the engine of English Grammar. 60% of Error Detection and Sentence Improvement questions in SSC rely on Verbs, Tenses, and Subject-Verb Agreement. Let's master them from Zero to Advanced.
Introduction to Verbs
What is a Verb? A verb tells us what the subject is doing (Action), what the subject is (State/Condition), or what the subject owns (Possession).
Verb क्या है? Verb वह शब्द है जो बताता है कि कर्ता (Subject) क्या कर रहा है (Action), कर्ता की अवस्था क्या है (State), या कर्ता के पास क्या है (Possession)।
Classroom Tip: Find the subject first. Ask "What is the subject doing/feeling/owning?" The answer is your verb.
🔊 Listen to Classroom Explanation
🔊 Listen to Teacher's Explanation
How to Identify Verbs? (Example Bank)
A. Action Verbs (कार्य)
B. State/Condition Verbs (अवस्था)
Note: These show existence, not physical movement. / नोट: ये अस्तित्व को दर्शाते हैं, किसी शारीरिक गति को नहीं।
C. Possession Verbs (अधिकार)
Main Verbs vs. Auxiliary (Helping) Verbs
🔊 Teacher's Concept Breakdown
1. Auxiliary (Helping) Verbs (सहायक क्रिया)
Definition: Verbs used with a main verb to show Tense, Voice, or Mood. They cannot stand alone meaningfully without a main verb (except in short answers).
Primary Auxiliaries: Be (is, am, are, was, were, been, being), Do (do, does, did), Have (has, have, had).
Modal Auxiliaries: Can, could, shall, should, will, would, may, might, must, ought to.
परिभाषा: वे Verbs जो Tense, Voice या Mood को दर्शाने के लिए Main Verb की सहायता करते हैं।
Primary: Be (is, am, are, was, were), Do (do, does, did), Have (has, have, had).
Modals: Can, could, shall, should, will, would, may, might, must.
2. Main Verbs (मुख्य क्रिया)
Definition: The primary verb in a sentence that shows the actual action or state. They change form (V1, V2, V3, V4, V5) based on the tense.
परिभाषा: वाक्य की मुख्य क्रिया जो वास्तविक कार्य को दर्शाती है। ये Tense के अनुसार अपना रूप (V1, V2, V3) बदलती हैं।
I have bought a pen. (Here 'have' is AUXILIARY, 'bought' is MAIN).
🚨 Understand the "Did" Blunder Trap
🚨 SSC Trap: The "Did" Blunder
The helping verbs Do, Does, and Did are strictly followed by V1 (Base Form). SSC often pairs 'Did' with V2 or V3 to trick you.
Transitive vs. Intransitive Verbs
🔊 Teacher's Concept Breakdown
1. Transitive Verb (सकर्मक क्रिया): Needs a Direct Object to complete its meaning. The action passes from the subject to the object.
🧪 The "What/Whom" Test
To find out if a verb is transitive, ask "What?" or "Whom?" immediately after the verb. If you get a logical answer, the verb is Transitive.
2. Intransitive Verb (अकर्मक क्रिया): Makes complete sense all by itself. It does NOT need an object to receive the action.
Bought what? A laptop.
Praised whom? Rohan.
Cried what? No answer. ('Loudly' is an adverb, not an object).
Rises what? No answer.
Ambitransitive Verbs (Dual Role)
Many verbs in English can act as both Transitive and Intransitive depending entirely on the sentence structure. You must apply the "What/Whom" test every time.
He played cricket.
Played what? Cricket. (Object exists)
He played very well.
Played what? No answer. (Well is an adverb)
The boy rang the bell.
The bell rang loudly.
🚨 SSC Trap: The "Prepositional Phrase" Illusion
SSC examiners will try to trick you by placing a Place (Where) or a Time (When) right after the verb. Because there are words after the verb, students assume it's Transitive. Remember: "Where" and "When" are adverbs, NOT Objects!
Example 1: The Place Trap
Example 2: The Time Trap
Verb Categories & Traps
🔊 Listen: The "King & Rebel" Analogy
🧠 The "King & The Rebel" Analogy
Think of a sentence as a kingdom. The Subject is the King, and the Tense is the strict law of Time.
👑 Finite Verbs are obedient citizens. They change their uniform (form) instantly whenever the King (Subject) or the Law (Tense) changes.
🎸 Non-Finite Verbs are stubborn rebels. They do NOT care about the King or the Time. They wear the exact same uniform no matter what happens in the sentence!
1. The Obedient Finite Verb
Notice how the main verb (want) constantly changes its spelling to obey the rules of Singular/Plural subjects and Past/Present tenses.
2. The Stubborn Non-Finite Verb
Notice how the second verb (to swim) remains completely frozen and unchanged, even when the subject and tense are changing all around it.
(Present, Plural subject)
(Present, Singular subject. Finite verb changed, non-finite didn't!)
(Past Tense. Finite verb changed, non-finite didn't!)
The 3 Types of Non-Finite "Rebels"
Because they refuse to act like normal verbs, Non-Finite verbs disguise themselves and act as Nouns or Adjectives in the sentence.
| Type | Structure & Disguise | Function & Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Infinitive | To + V1 Acts as a NOUN |
"He likes to study." (Likes what? 'To study' is the object/noun). |
| 2. Gerund | V1 + ing Acts as a NOUN |
"Smoking is injurious to health." (What is injurious? 'Smoking' is the subject/noun). |
| 3. Participle | V1+ing OR V3 Acts as an ADJECTIVE |
"Look at the burning train." / "A broken chair." (Describes the train/chair like an adjective). |
💡 Teacher's Trick: Identifying Gerund vs. Present Participle
Both end in "-ing". How to tell them apart?
If you can replace the "-ing" word with "it" or a noun (like 'apple'), and the sentence makes sense, it's a Gerund. If it describes a noun, it's a Participle.
दोनों के अंत में "-ing" आता है। यदि आप "-ing" वाले शब्द को "it" या किसी noun से बदल सकते हैं और वाक्य का अर्थ सही रहता है, तो यह Gerund है। यदि यह किसी noun की विशेषता बताता है, तो यह Participle है।
🔊 Listen: The Logic Behind Gerunds
🧠 Teacher's Deep Dive: Why do these take Gerunds? (The Hidden Logic)
Instead of blindly memorizing long lists of words, let's understand the psychology of the English language. There is a deeply logical reason why some verbs demand an Infinitive (To + V1) and others demand a Gerund (V1 + ing). It all comes down to two major rules:
Logic 1: The "Real vs. Unreal" (Time Concept)
This is the secret to cracking 80% of Gerund/Infinitive questions:
- Infinitives (To + V1) are Future-focused. They point to actions that are unfulfilled, abstract, potential, or haven't happened yet at the time the main verb occurs.
- Gerunds (V1+ing) are Past/Present-focused. They point to actions that are real, already experienced, ongoing, or completed.
The "Unreal / Future" Infinitive
"I want to travel."
Logic: You haven't traveled yet. The traveling is a future desire, an unfulfilled potential. Therefore, it takes 'to + V1'.
"He decided to leave."
Logic: The decision happens first. The actual leaving happens in the future after the decision. It is unrealized at that moment.
"She promised to help."
Logic: A promise is always about a future action that hasn't occurred yet.
The "Real / Experienced" Gerund
"I enjoy reading."
Logic: You can only truly "enjoy" an activity you have actually experienced doing in reality. It's a real, known action. Therefore, it takes V1+ing.
"He denied stealing the car."
Logic: You can only "deny" an action that supposedly already happened in the past. It is treated as a real event.
"I finished typing the report."
Logic: You can only "finish" an action that was actively ongoing in reality.
Logic 2: The Preposition Rule (The "To" Trap)
This is where SSC tricks 90% of students. In English grammar, there is a strict, unbreakable rule: Every preposition MUST be followed by an Object (and Objects MUST be Nouns or Pronouns).
Because a Gerund acts as a Noun, it fits perfectly after a preposition. An Infinitive is a verb form, so it can never follow a preposition.
The Trap is the word "To".
Most of the time, "To" is just an infinitive marker (e.g., I want to go).
But in specific phrases like "Look forward to", "Addicted to", "Averse to", "Prone to", the word "to" is acting as a pure Preposition indicating direction or attachment. Because it is a preposition, whatever follows it MUST be a noun (or a gerund).
💡 The Noun Replacement Test
If you are confused whether the word "to" in a sentence is an infinitive marker or a preposition, try putting a regular Noun (like 'money', 'tea', or 'my birthday') directly after it. If the sentence makes sense, "to" is a preposition, and therefore requires a Gerund for verbs!
- Test: "He is addicted to tea."
(Makes sense! 'To' acts as a preposition showing attachment). - Result: "He is addicted to smoking." ✅
(Correct! Because 'to' is a preposition, we must use the gerund/noun form of smoke). - Test: "I look forward to my birthday."
(Makes sense! 'To' is a preposition showing direction towards an event). - Result: "I look forward to meeting you." ✅
(Correct! We must use the gerund 'meeting', not 'to meet'). - Test: "She is accustomed to the cold weather."
(Makes sense! Shows a habit towards something). - Result: "She is accustomed to waking up early." ✅
- Test: "He went there with a view to marriage."
(Makes sense! Shows aim or purpose towards a noun). - Result: "He went there with a view to studying." ✅
- Test: "The manager is averse to risk."
(Makes sense! Shows dislike towards a noun). - Result: "The manager is averse to taking risks." ✅
🚨 SSC Trap: Verbs strictly followed by Gerunds
Examiners will give you an Infinitive (To + V1) where a Gerund (V1+ing) is required. Memorize these critical verbs and phrases that ONLY take Gerunds:
Enjoy, Avoid, Mind, Admit, Deny, Postpone, Look forward to, Addicted to, Used to (with 'be' or 'get'), Appreciate, Consider, Delay, Discuss, Dislike, Finish, Give up, Imagine, Involve, Keep, Mention, Miss, Practice, Quit, Recommend, Report, Resent, Resist, Risk, Suggest, Anticipate, Can't help, Put off, Object to, Averse to, Prone to, Confess to, With a view to, Habituated to, Committed to, Devoted to.
💡 Logic: "Enjoy" expresses pleasure in an action that is already experienced and real (Noun/Gerund).
💡 Logic: You avoid an action conceptualized as an existing, real thing.
💡 Logic: "Mind" refers to a potential objection to a real, ongoing action.
💡 Logic: You admit to an action that is already completed in the past.
💡 Logic: Similar to admit, you deny a real action that supposedly already took place.
💡 Logic: "Postpone" delays an action that is treated as a solid event/noun.
💡 Logic: "To" is a Preposition here indicating direction of thought. Prepositions must take Noun/Gerund objects.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" shows attachment to a habit (which acts as a noun).
💡 Logic: When preceded by a 'be' verb (am/is/are), "to" is a preposition showing adaptation to a state.
💡 Logic: You appreciate an action that has realistically happened or is happening.
💡 Logic: "Consider" treats the action as an idea or topic (Noun/Gerund) to be thought about.
💡 Logic: Pushing back a conceptualized event (Noun).
💡 Logic: You discuss a "topic". The gerund acts as the noun/topic being discussed.
💡 Logic: Expresses distaste for a real, experienced action.
💡 Logic: You can only finish an action that is already ongoing and real.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "Up" is a preposition and must be followed by a noun/gerund object.
💡 Logic: Visualizing an action as an ongoing reality in your mind.
💡 Logic: The action is treated as a component or part (Noun) of the main subject.
💡 Logic: Indicates the continuous, ongoing nature of an action.
💡 Logic: Referring to an action as a conversational topic (Noun).
💡 Logic: You can only "miss" an action that was real and previously experienced.
💡 Logic: Implies repeatedly doing an ongoing action in reality.
💡 Logic: Stopping an action that is currently ongoing and real.
💡 Logic: Proposing an action as an idea or concept (Noun).
💡 Logic: Giving an account of an action as a completed event in the past.
💡 Logic: Feeling bitter about a real, experienced situation.
💡 Logic: Fighting against an ongoing urge or action.
💡 Logic: Exposing oneself to an action treated as a dangerous concept.
💡 Logic: Proposing an action as an idea (Noun).
💡 Logic: Preparing for an action treated as an inevitable future reality/event.
💡 Logic: An idiom meaning you are unable to stop an ongoing urge or reaction.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "Off" is a preposition requiring a noun/gerund object.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" indicates opposition directed toward a thing/action.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" indicates distaste directed toward a concept.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" indicates a tendency pointing toward a thing.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" indicates admission directed toward a past act.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" indicates aim directed toward a specific goal.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" indicates habit formation toward a lifestyle/thing.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" indicates dedication directed toward a cause.
💡 Logic: Preposition Rule. "To" indicates loyalty or time given to a concept.
💡 Teacher's Trick: Verbs Taking ONLY Gerunds & "To" Prepositions
Normally, two verbs are joined by 'to' (I want to go). However, the following verbs are strictly followed by a Gerund (V1+ing), NEVER an infinitive:
Enjoy, Avoid, Mind, Admit, Deny, Postpone, Delay, Worth, Cannot help.
While "to" usually takes V1, if "to" is part of a phrasal preposition, it takes a Gerund (V+ing). Memorize these: Look forward to, Accustomed to, Used to, Addicted to, With a view to, Prone to.
Stative vs. Dynamic & Causative Verbs
🔊 Listen: Stative Verbs Concept
Dynamic Verbs: Show physical action (run, eat, play) that has a clear beginning and end. They can be used in Continuous (-ing) tenses.
Stative Verbs: Show a mental state, sense, emotion, or possession. Because states do not have a physical "start and stop" motion, they CANNOT be used in continuous (-ing) tenses in their normal sense.
Key Stative Verbs List:
See, Taste, Smell, Hear, Think, Know, Understand, Believe, Love, Hate, Want, Own, Belong, Contain, Appear, Seem.
⚠️ The SSC Curveball: Dual Meaning Verbs
Some verbs can act as Stative OR Dynamic depending on their meaning. If the meaning changes from a "state" to a "physical action", they CAN take the -ing form.
- Have:
As Possession (Stative): "I have a car." (Not am having)
As Eating/Experiencing (Dynamic): "I am having lunch right now." ✅ - Think:
As an Opinion (Stative): "I think you are right." (Not am thinking)
As Mental Process (Dynamic): "I am thinking about my exam." ✅
🔊 Listen: Causative Verbs Logic
2. Causative Verbs (Advanced) / प्रेरणार्थक क्रिया
Causative verbs are used when the subject doesn't perform the action themselves, but causes someone else to do it. The main ones are: Let, Make, Have, Get, Help.
Causative verbs का उपयोग तब होता है जब कर्ता (Subject) खुद काम नहीं करता, बल्कि किसी और से करवाता है। मुख्य हैं: Let, Make, Have, Get, Help.
- Let (To Allow): Gives permission.
➔ Let + Person + Bare Infinitive (V1) - Make (To Force): Forces or requires someone to do it.
➔ Make + Person + Bare Infinitive (V1) - Have (To Assign): Gives someone the responsibility to do it.
➔ Have + Person + Bare Infinitive (V1) - Get (To Convince): Persuades someone to do it.
➔ Get + Person + To + V1 (Notice 'Get' takes 'to')
🚨 The SSC Active vs Passive Rule
Examiners will test if you know the difference between living persons and non-living objects receiving the action.
- Make / Let: Followed by Bare Infinitive (V1 without 'to') in Active Voice.
- Get / Have + Things: If the object is non-living (a car, a house, hair), it is followed by the Past Participle (V3).
Mega Compilation: 50 Confusing Verb Forms
50 भ्रमित करने वाले Verb Forms
SSC extensively tests the difference between V1, V2, and V3 forms of irregular, similar-sounding verbs. Click the 🔊 icon to hear the exact pronunciation. Memorize this definitive list.
| Base Verb (V1) & Meaning | Past (V2) | Past Participle (V3) | Example Sentence / SSC Trap |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Bear (to tolerate/carry) | bore | borne | He has borne many hardships. |
| 2. Bear (to give birth) | bore | born | She was born in 1990. |
| 3. Find (to discover) | found | found | I found my lost keys. |
| 4. Found (to establish) | founded | founded | The Scholars' Akademy was founded recently. |
| 5. Hang (to suspend a thing) | hung | hung | He hung the picture on the wall. |
| 6. Hang (to execute by rope) | hanged | hanged | The traitor was hanged till death. (Trap: hung) |
| 7. Lie (to tell falsehood) | lied | lied | He lied to his parents. |
| 8. Lie (to rest horizontally) | lay | lain | She has lain in bed all day. |
| 9. Lay (to put down/sacrifice) | laid | laid | The hen laid an egg. / He laid his life. |
| 10. Fly (move in air) | flew | flown | The bird has flown away. |
| 11. Flow (move as liquid) | flowed | flowed | The river has flowed gently. |
| 12. Overflow (spill over) | overflowed | overflowed | The river has overflowed. (Trap: overflown) |
| 13. Rise (to get up/increase by itself) | rose | risen | The sun has risen. Prices are rising. |
| 14. Raise (to lift/increase by someone) | raised | raised | He raised his hand to ask a question. |
| 15. Fall (to drop down by itself) | fell | fallen | The tree has fallen. |
| 16. Fell (to chop/cut down) | felled | felled | The woodcutter felled the tree. |
| 17. See (perceive with eyes naturally) | saw | seen | I saw him yesterday. |
| 18. Look (direct eyes intentionally) | looked | looked | Look at the blackboard. |
| 19. Watch (observe moving things) | watched | watched | I am watching a movie. |
| 20. Hear (perceive sound naturally) | heard | heard | I heard a loud noise. |
| 21. Listen (pay attention to sound) | listened | listened | Listen to your teacher. |
| 22. Advise (verb: to give counsel) | advised | advised | The doctor advised him rest. |
| 23. Advice (noun: counsel) | - | - | He gave me good advice. |
| 24. Practise (verb: to train) | practised | practised | I practise math daily. |
| 25. Practice (noun: training) | - | - | Practice makes a man perfect. |
| 26. Affect (verb: to influence) | affected | affected | The rain affected the match. |
| 27. Effect (noun: result / verb: bring about) | effected | effected | The new law was effected immediately. |
| 28. Adapt (adjust to environment) | adapted | adapted | He adapted to the cold weather. |
| 29. Adopt (take up/legally take child) | adopted | adopted | They adopted an orphan. |
| 30. Adept (adjective: skilled) | - | - | He is adept in English. |
| 31. Lose (to misplace/fail) | lost | lost | Did you lose your pen? |
| 32. Loose (adjective: not tight) | loosed | loosed | This shirt is too loose. |
| 33. Cast (to throw/broadcast) | cast | cast | The net was cast. (Trap: casted) |
| 34. Broadcast (transmit signal) | broadcast | broadcast | The news was broadcast. (Trap: broadcasted) |
| 35. Burst (break open) | burst | burst | The balloon burst. (Trap: bursted) |
| 36. Cost (require payment) | cost | cost | It cost me 100 rupees. (Trap: costed) |
| 37. Read (look at text) | read (red) | read (red) | I have read the book. |
| 38. Telecast (broadcast on TV) | telecast | telecast | The match will be telecast live. |
| 39. Put (place) | put | put | He put the book on the table. |
| 40. Hurt (cause pain) | hurt | hurt | My leg hurt yesterday. |
| 41. Sink (go down - non-living) | sank | sunk | The ship sank in the ocean. |
| 42. Drown (die in water - living) | drowned | drowned | The boy drowned in the river. |
| 43. Invent (create something new) | invented | invented | Edison invented the bulb. |
| 44. Discover (find what already exists) | discovered | discovered | Columbus discovered America. |
| 45. Deny (say something is untrue) | denied | denied | The thief denied the charge. |
| 46. Refuse (decline to do/accept) | refused | refused | He refused to help me. |
| 47. Flee (run away from danger) | fled | fled | The thief fled. (Trap: fled away - redundant) |
| 48. Strike (hit forcefully) | struck | struck/stricken | He was struck by lightning. |
| 49. Wind (turn/wrap) | wound | wound | He wound the clock. |
| 50. Wound (cause injury) | wounded | wounded | The soldier was severely wounded. |
Subject-Verb Agreement (Master Level)
🔊 Listen: The Core Logic of S.V.A.
The Core Rule: Singular Subject = Singular Verb (is, was, has, plays). Plural Subject = Plural Verb (are, were, have, play). However, SSC uses complex conjunctions to hide the real subject.
The Golden Rule: Singular Subject takes Singular Verb. Plural Subject takes Plural Verb. But SSC hides the real subject using intervening phrases.
When subjects are joined by: as well as, with, along with, together with, and not, besides, except, rather than, accompanied by... the verb must agree with the FIRST subject.
🧠 Teacher's Logic: Why the FIRST subject?
Words like "with" and "along with" are actually Prepositions, not true conjunctions (like 'and'). In English, any noun following a preposition becomes an "Object of the Preposition" and can never be the true Subject of the sentence. Therefore, we only care about the noun that came before the preposition!
⚡ Mental Shortcut
Ignore everything between the commas or after "along with". Just read the first word and match the verb!
🚨 SSC Trap Alert
Examiners place a plural noun right before the blank to trick you. Look at the FIRST word.
Trap Words: Along with his parents, As well as the ministers, Together with his friends.
If subjects are joined by Either...or, Neither...nor, Not only...but also, Or, Nor, the verb agrees with the subject NEAREST to the verb.
🧠 Teacher's Logic
Unlike "along with", the words "or" and "nor" act as scales weighing two distinct options. Because the sentence is offering a choice, the verb simply defaults to agreeing with the noun standing physically closest to it!
🚨 SSC Trap Alert: The Question Mark Trick
Watch out for sentence inversions (questions). In an interrogative sentence, the helping verb comes at the beginning. The verb must STILL agree with the subject closest to it!
A number of / A large number of / A great number of denotes a plural quantity ("Many") ➔ Takes Plural Noun + Plural Verb.
The number of denotes a specific mathematical value (e.g., "50" or "100") ➔ Takes Plural Noun + Singular Verb.
Although "Many a" and "More than one" logically imply a plural meaning, structurally they are Singular phrases in English Grammar. They strictly take a Singular Noun and a Singular Verb.
🚨 SSC Trap Alert
The structure "More + Plural Noun + than one" takes a PLURAL verb. Pay close attention to word placement.
Words ending in -one or -body (Everyone, Someone, Nobody, Anybody) and Distributives (Each, Either, Neither, Every) ALWAYS take a Singular Verb.
"It is high time / It is about time": If followed by a Subject, the verb MUST/ALWAYS be in the Past Tense (V2). If followed by 'to', it takes V1.
Imaginary Condition/Subjunctive (If, As if, I wish, As though, Would that): Use 'were' for ALL subjects (I, he, she, it). Never use 'was'.
A collective noun takes a Singular Verb when the group acts as a single united entity. It takes a Plural Verb when the members of the group are divided in opinion or acting individually.
(United decision = Singular)
(Divided = Plural)
(Arguing implies individuals acting separately = Plural)
When a relative pronoun (who, which, that) connects a subject to a verb, the verb must agree with the Antecedent (the noun sitting immediately before the relative pronoun).
🚨 The "One of the..." Trap
SSC loves combining "One of the" with a relative pronoun.
Normally, "One of the boys is..." (Singular).
But! "He is one of the boys who are..." (Plural, because 'who' looks at 'boys').
(Matches 'players')
(The word 'only' forces a singular verb)
For expressions like One-third of, Fifty percent of, Most of, Some of, Half of... look at the noun that comes AFTER "of".
If the noun is Uncountable (Singular), use a Singular verb. If it is Countable (Plural), use a Plural verb.
(Cake is singular)
(Students is plural)
Some nouns end in "s" making them look plural, but they are strictly Singular.
Subjects: Mathematics, Physics, Politics, Economics.
Diseases: Measles, Mumps, Rickets.
Others: News, Innings, Billiards, Summons.
(If preceded by a possessive pronoun like 'his/my', subjects become 'calculations/concepts' and take a PLURAL verb)
When you place "The" before certain adjectives (The rich, The poor, The brave, The blind, The elderly), it refers to the entire class of people. It becomes a Plural Subject and takes a Plural Verb.
(V1 without 's' is plural)
Modals & Conditionals (Master Class)
🔊 Listen: The Classroom Lecture
Part 1: The Magic of Modals
👨🏫 Teacher's Concept: The "Mood Managers"
Think of normal Main Verbs (play, eat, study) as the Workers—they do the physical action.
Modals (Can, Should, Must, May, Will) are the Managers. They don't do the physical work; they just show the "Mood" or "Attitude" of the sentence. They tell us about Ability (Can), Duty (Should), Possibility (May), or Certainty (Must).
Modals are strict dictators. They refuse to share power with grammar rules like Singular/Plural or Past/Present. Therefore, a Modal is ALWAYS followed by the pure Base Form (V1) of the verb.
- ❌ No adding 's' or 'es' (He can plays).
- ❌ No adding 'ed' or 'ing' (She must went).
- ❌ No adding 'to' in between (I should to study).
If modals are always followed by V1, how do we talk about the past? We use a "Perfect Modal" structure: Modal + HAVE + V3.
This is used to talk about past regrets, unfulfilled duties, or deductions about things that already happened.
(Grammar crime: V2 immediately after a modal)
(You had a duty, but you failed to do it)
(He had the ability in the past, but didn't win)
(A strong logical guess about the past)
🚨 SSC Trap: The Redundancy (Superfluous) Error
SSC loves to mix a modal with an adjective or adverb that means the exact same thing. Using two words for the same mood is a grammatical crime called Redundancy.
- Can / Could already means ability. ➔ Never use "able to" with them!
- May / Might already means possibility. ➔ Never use "possibly" or "probably" with them!
- Should / Must already means duty. ➔ Never use "compulsory" with them!
OR: I will not be able to come tomorrow.
Part 2: Conditional Sentences (If Clauses)
A conditional sentence has two parts: The Condition (starts with If/When) and the Result (the main clause). SSC strictly tests if you know which Tense pairs with which Modal.
| Condition Type | 'If' Clause (The Condition) | Main Clause (The Result) |
|---|---|---|
| Type 0 (Universal Fact) 100% True |
Simple Present (V1) | Simple Present (V1) |
| Type 1 (Probable Future) Likely to happen |
Simple Present (V1) | will / shall / can + V1 |
| Type 2 (Improbable Present) Imagining right now |
Simple Past (V2) | would / could + V1 |
| Type 3 (Impossible Past) Regret; too late |
Past Perfect (had + V3) | would have + V3 |
🚨 The 3 Deadly SSC Conditional Traps
Trap 1: "Will" in the If-Clause
You can NEVER use future tense markers (will, shall, would) in the clause containing 'If', 'When', 'Unless', 'Until', 'Provided', or 'In case'.
Trap 2: Unless & Until (Double Negative)
'Unless' means 'if not' (Action/Condition). 'Until' means 'till not' (Time). Because they are inherently negative words, you cannot use 'NOT' in the same clause with them!
Trap 3: Inversion (Dropping the 'If')
In highly formal English (very common in CGL Mains), we can remove the word 'If' by bringing the helping verb before the subject. This is not a question; it's a condition!
(Exact same meaning, perfectly correct!)
Common Verb Errors (SSC PYQ Master List)
🔊 Listen: The Superfluous Trap
Review these quick fixes before your exam. SSC examiners love to test your reading habits. In spoken English, we often use extra words that are grammatically incorrect. These fall into two major categories: Superfluous Redundancy and Preposition Errors with Transitive Verbs.
Redundancy means using more words than necessary. If a verb already has a specific meaning built into it (like a direction or repetition), adding another word that means the exact same thing is an error.
('Return' already means 'come back'. Drop 'back' from Return, Revert, Retreat, and Recede.)
('Repeat' already means 'do again'.)
('Flee' already means 'run away'.)
(A very common spoken error. Never use 'up' with cope.)
('Reply' inherently means answering back. Drop 'back'.)
('Retreat' means withdrawing back.)
('Proceed' already means moving forward.)
('Reimburse' means paying back.)
Remember the Transitive Verb rule? Transitive verbs pass their action directly to the Object. They DO NOT need a preposition in the middle! SSC will always add 'about', 'on', or 'into' to trick you.
(Drop 'about' from Discuss and Describe.)
(Drop 'for' when 'order' is used as a Verb.)
(Drop 'on'. Note: If 'attack' is a Noun, 'on' is correct. E.g., "There was an attack on India.")
(Comprise = Consists of. Drop 'of' in Active Voice.)
(Investigate = Enquire into. Drop 'into' with Investigate.)
(Await = Wait for. Drop 'for'.)
(Drop 'to' or 'with'.)
(Drop 'on'. But if using the noun: "Put your signature on this document" is correct.)
🧠 The "ENTER" Exception (Crucial for CGL Mains)
The verb "Enter" is a special dual-role case in English grammar. SSC asks this question almost every year because the rule flips depending on what you are entering.
Rule A: Entering a Physical Place
When a person or object physically goes inside a 3D space (a room, a house, a building, a country), "Enter" is a strictly transitive verb. You must DROP the word 'into'.
Rule B: Entering an Abstract Concept
When entering an agreement, an alliance, a debate, a new phase, or a conversation (things you cannot physically touch), it becomes an idiom. You MUST USE 'into'.
(Abstract concept)
(Abstract concept)
(Abstract concept)
Mind Games: How SSC Tricks You
माइंड गेम्स: SSC आपको कैसे फंसाता है
After analyzing thousands of PYQs (Previous Year Questions), we've cracked the examiner's psychology. Here are the top 3 tricks they use to force you into making a mistake, and exactly how to beat them.
🔊 Listen: Beat the Examiner's Psychology
Trick 1: The "Distance" Trap (Prepositional Phrases)
The Trap: SSC creates a massive gap between the Subject and the Verb using prepositional phrases ("of", "in", "from", "with"). Your brain naturally reads the noun sitting closest to the blank and matches the verb to it, which is exactly what the examiner wants you to do!
Teacher's Hack: The "Preposition Block". Whenever you see a preposition, mentally cross out everything that follows it until you hit the verb. The true subject is always hiding before the first preposition.
(Subject is 'quality' - Singular)
(Subject is 'introduction' - Singular)
Trick 2: The Redundant Verb Trap (Superfluous Expressions)
The Trap: They add extra prepositions to verbs that already contain that meaning inherently. Because these sound perfectly normal in spoken Hindi or English ("I will return back"), students skip right over the error.
Teacher's Hack: Memorize this "No-Preposition" block list in Active Voice:
• Comprise (No 'of') • Despite (No 'of') • Return / Revert / Retreat (No 'back') • Discuss / Describe (No 'about') • Enter (No 'into' - for physical places)
(Only "In spite of" takes 'of'. Despite never does.)
Trick 3: The "Hidden Condition" Trap
The Trap: Mixing up Conditional Tenses. Examiners know students blindly memorize: "If + had + V3 ➔ would have + V3". So, they put the word "had" in the sentence as a main verb (possession), hoping you will mistakenly use "would have".
Teacher's Hack: Check the "If" clause carefully. Is "Had" acting as a helping verb (followed by a V3 like 'played' or 'gone')? Or is "Had" acting as the main verb showing possession (like 'had money' or 'had a car')?
If it shows possession, it is Simple Past (V2). So it must take "would + V1"!
(Student thinks: "I see 'had', so I must use 'would have'.")
(Here 'had' is V2 of 'have'. Condition Type 2 applies: Past ➔ Would + V1).
Alternative (Type 3): If I had had money, I would have bought a car.
(Had = Possession = Simple Past V2).
Previous Year SSC Questions (Mega Bank)
Test your knowledge with these 50 high-frequency, actual questions from CGL, CHSL, and CPO exams. Scroll down the box to see all questions and click to reveal the detailed explanations.
Q1. The river has overflown its banks due to heavy rain. (CGL 2021)
Rule: The V3 form of 'overflow' (spilling water) is 'overflowed'. 'Overflown' is the V3 of 'overfly' (flying over something).
Q2. The murderer was hung yesterday. (CHSL 2020)
Rule: For executing a person by rope, the V2/V3 form is 'hanged'. 'Hung' is used for suspending non-living objects (like a painting).
Q3. He lay his luggage aside and lay down to rest. (CPO 2019)
Rule: 'Lay' means to put down an object (V2 is laid). 'Lie' means to rest oneself (V2 is lay). Correct: He laid his luggage and lay down.
Q4. The woodcutter fell the trees to clear the forest. (CGL 2022)
Rule: 'Fall' means to drop by itself (V2=fell). 'Fell' means to cut down a tree intentionally (V2=felled).
Q5. The heavy rain did not effect the match. (CHSL 2021)
Rule: 'Affect' is a verb meaning to influence. 'Effect' is a noun meaning the result. The sentence needs a main verb here.
Q6. I am knowing him for ten years. (CGL 2020)
Rule: 'Know' is a stative verb and cannot be used in the continuous (-ing) tense. Use Present Perfect instead.
Q7. This house is belonging to my uncle. (CPO 2022)
Rule: 'Belong' is a stative verb showing possession. It can never be used in the continuous (-ing) form.
Q8. Are you understanding my point? (MTS 2021)
Rule: 'Understand' is a stative verb of the mind. It should be in the simple present tense.
Q9. She denied to steal the money. (CGL 2019)
Rule: The verb 'deny' describes a real, completed past action and must strictly be followed by a Gerund (V1+ing).
Q10. I look forward to meet you soon. (CGL 2023)
Rule: In the phrase 'look forward to', 'to' acts as a preposition, not an infinitive marker. Prepositions must be followed by a Noun/Gerund.
Q11. The captain along with the players were present. (CHSL 2022)
Rule: When subjects are joined by 'along with', the verb agrees with the first subject (The captain - singular).
Q12. Neither the principal nor the teachers was present. (CPO 2020)
Rule: In 'Neither...nor' pairs, the verb matches the subject closest to it. Here, 'teachers' is plural, so the verb must be 'were'.
Q13. A number of students is waiting outside. (CGL 2021)
Rule: 'A number of' means 'many' and takes a plural noun and a plural verb.
Q14. The number of accidents are increasing daily. (CHSL 2019)
Rule: 'The number of' points to a specific mathematical figure, which acts as a singular subject.
Q15. He is one of the players who has been selected. (CGL 2022)
Rule: The relative pronoun 'who' acts for the noun just before it ('players' - plural). Therefore, it needs a plural verb.
Q16. Bread and butter are my favorite breakfast. (MTS 2020)
Rule: When two nouns represent a single idea or dish, they act as a singular subject.
Q17. Mathematics are a difficult subject for many. (CPO 2021)
Rule: Subjects ending in '-ics' (Physics, Mathematics) are singular in meaning.
Q18. His mathematics is very weak. (CGL 2018)
Rule: When '-ics' subjects are preceded by a possessive pronoun (his/my), they mean 'calculations' and become plural.
Q19. The rich is getting richer in this economy. (CHSL 2023)
Rule: "The + Adjective" (The rich) represents the entire class of people. It is a plural subject.
Q20. Many a men have died at sea. (CGL 2020)
Rule: The phrase 'Many a' must strictly be followed by a singular noun and a singular verb.
Q21. More than one boy were absent yesterday. (CPO 2019)
Rule: The phrase 'More than one' is grammatically singular. It takes a singular noun and singular verb.
Q22. More boys than one was present. (CGL 2021)
Rule: In the structure "More + Plural Noun + than one", the plural noun dominates, so it takes a plural verb.
Q23. Each of the girls have a blue pen. (CHSL 2020)
Rule: The subject is 'Each' (Singular Indefinite Pronoun). 'Of the girls' is just a prepositional phrase.
Q24. Nothing but trees were seen in the desert. (MTS 2022)
Rule: The subject is 'Nothing' (Singular Indefinite Pronoun). 'But trees' is a prepositional phrase meaning 'except trees'.
Q25. The committee is divided in their opinion. (CGL 2019)
Rule: When a collective noun (committee, jury) is divided in its action or opinion, it acts as plural individuals.
Q26. If it will rain, I will not go out. (CGL 2022)
Rule: Never use a future tense marker (will/shall) inside the 'If' conditional clause.
Q27. If I was the Prime Minister, I would change the rules. (CPO 2021)
Rule: For imaginary subjunctive conditions, use 'were' with all subjects (I, he, she, it).
Q28. It is high time you start studying. (CHSL 2020)
Rule: The phrase 'It is high time' followed by a subject must take a verb in the Simple Past Tense (V2).
Q29. Unless you do not work hard, you will fail. (CGL 2023)
Rule: 'Unless' is inherently negative ('if not'). Using 'not' with it creates an incorrect double negative.
Q30. Wait here until I do not return. (MTS 2019)
Rule: 'Until' is a negative condition of time. Do not use 'not' in the same clause.
Q31. If he had worked hard, he would pass. (CGL 2021)
Rule: Type 3 Conditional. "Past Perfect (had + V3)" in the If-clause pairs with "would have + V3" in the main clause.
Q32. Had I known the truth, I would help you. (CPO 2022)
Rule: This is a Type 3 Conditional using Inversion (dropping 'If'). It still requires 'would have + V3'.
Q33. He ordered me as if he was my boss. (CHSL 2021)
Rule: 'As if' sets up an imaginary condition. Use 'were' for all subjects.
Q34. I cannot be able to come tomorrow. (CGL 2018)
Rule: Superfluous error. 'Can' already means ability, so using 'able to' with it is redundant.
Q35. You ought respect your elders. (MTS 2021)
Rule: 'Ought' and 'Used' are the only modals that must be followed by 'to + V1'.
Q36. The teacher made him to stand on the desk. (CGL 2020)
Rule: The causative verb 'make' in active voice takes a Bare Infinitive (V1 without 'to').
Q37. I got my car repair yesterday. (CHSL 2019)
Rule: When the causative verb 'get' or 'have' is followed by a non-living thing (car), use the Past Participle (V3).
Q38. He went to Delhi with a view to find a job. (CGL 2021)
Rule: In the phrase 'with a view to', 'to' is a preposition. Prepositions must be followed by a Gerund (V1+ing).
Q39. I don't mind you coming late. (CPO 2020)
Rule: A pronoun placed immediately before a gerund ('coming') must be in the possessive case.
Q40. She is accustomed to wake up early. (CGL 2022)
Rule: 'Accustomed to' acts as a prepositional phrase and takes a Gerund (V1+ing).
Q41. I would rather to die than beg. (CHSL 2021)
Rule: The phrase 'would rather' is followed by a bare infinitive (V1 without 'to').
Q42. He avoided to talk to me after the argument. (MTS 2020)
Rule: 'Avoid' is one of the verbs that strictly takes a Gerund, not an infinitive.
Q43. Please return back the book by Sunday. (CGL 2019)
Rule: Redundancy error. 'Return' already means 'give back'.
Q44. We discussed about the matter for hours. (CPO 2021)
Rule: 'Discuss' is a transitive verb in active voice. It passes its action directly to the object without a preposition.
Q45. He ordered for three cups of coffee. (CHSL 2023)
Rule: When 'order' is used as a verb, it is transitive. Drop 'for'.
Q46. The book comprises of ten chapters. (CGL 2020)
Rule: 'Comprise' means 'consists of'. You cannot use 'of' with it in the Active voice.
Q47. The thief fled away from the police station. (MTS 2021)
Rule: Redundancy error. 'Flee' inherently means 'run away'.
Q48. Let us proceed forward with the plan. (CGL 2022)
Rule: Redundancy error. 'Proceed' inherently means to move forward.
Q49. She resembles with her mother. (CHSL 2019)
Rule: 'Resemble' is a transitive verb. Drop the preposition 'with' or 'to'.
Q50. He entered into the room quietly. (CGL 2021)
Rule: When entering a physical place (like a room), drop 'into'. Use 'into' only for abstract concepts (like entering into an agreement).
Quick Interactive Practice Set
Select the correct option and check your understanding. Select carefully!
PRACTICE MOCK TESTS
Test your mastery with these real-time JS engines. Marking scheme: +1 for Correct, -0.25 for Incorrect.
Mock Test 1: Subject-Verb Agreement & Forms
- ✅ Contains 25 high-yield questions.
- ⏱ Time Limit: 15 Minutes.
- 📊 Calculates score dynamically with negative marking.
Test 1 Submitted!
Detailed Review
Mock Test 2: Non-Finites & Advanced Rules
- ✅ Contains 25 advanced trap questions.
- ⏱ Time Limit: 15 Minutes.
- 📊 Calculates score dynamically with negative marking.
Test 2 Submitted!
Detailed Review
Excellent Work, Future Officer! 🌟
You have completed the most rigorous and important grammar module for SSC.
Revision Power Notes
Remember the core principles: Match the true subject, respect the stative verbs, and know when to use Gerunds vs. Infinitives. Keep revising the Mock Tests until you score 100%.
- 📌 Along with/As well as: Verb follows 1st subject.
- 📌 Either or/Neither nor: Verb follows nearest subject.
- 📌 Many a / More than one: Take Singular Noun + Singular Verb.
- 📌 Stative Verbs: No -ing form (know, love, taste, belong).
- 📌 Gerund Mandatory: Enjoy, Avoid, Look forward to + V(ing).
- 📌 Bare Infinitive: Let, Make, See, Hear, Had better + V1 (No 'to').
- 📌 It is high time: Must take V2 (Past tense).
- 📌 Subjunctive (If I...): Always use 'were' for all subjects.
Next Chapter: TENSES & CONDITIONALS.