Archaic conjugation of common verbs? [closed]
I haven't found a convenient resource, but there's really not much to say:
be
- I am
- thou art
- he, she, it is
we, ye, they are
I, he, she, it was
- thou wast
- we, ye, they were
have
- I, we, ye, they have
- thou hast
he, she, it hath
I, he, she, it, we, ye, they had
- thou hadst
do
- I, we, ye, they do
- thou dost
he, she, it doth
I, he, she, it, we, ye, they did
- thou didst
Almost all other verbs are like do and have, with three forms in the present (eat, eatest, eateth) and two in the past (ate, atest). Sometimes the 'e' is omitted giving endings -st and -th. This is regular in the past (eg waitedst, and even the tongue-twister walkedst), and sporadically elsewhere, especially in poetry.
Edit: added the sentence about omitting the 'e'