Try should be followed by to rather than and. "I will try to go," not "I will try and go
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You had a right to warn me," should be "It was your duty to warn me, or you ought to have warned me."
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Want should not be used in the sense of wish, e. g., "I want it" really means "I feel the want of it" or "I lack it." Want, wish, and need should be carefully distinguished.
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Table II This table contains the principal parts of all irregular verbs whose past tense and perfect participles are alike
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This table includes verbs that are both regular and irregular. A Verbs in which the regular form is preferred
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The verbs of the following list also are irregular; but as they lack one or more of the principal parts, they are called defective verbs
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Example: I ought to have gone yesterday
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The verb ought, when used to express past duty or obligation, is followed by what is called the perfect infinitive—a use peculiar to itself because ought has no past form