As a new coinage it would take regular verb inflections: text, texts, texted, etc.

And as I hear it used, the "to" is unnecessary.

I texted her but she didn't text me back.

It feels like the verb form is going to parallel "call" in that respect: You wouldn't say "I called to her" if you meant you called on the phone.


New verbs normally occur as regular verbs, so you'd expect past tense and past participle texted. However, for reasons of phonology, some speakers may produce the past tense and past participle as text. Only time will tell which form wins. Perhaps they'll remain alternatives.

Although the current meaning of text is new, it first occurred as a verb around 1600 when it meant 'To inscribe, write, or print in a text-hand or in capital or large letters'. The past tense and past participle occur as texted in all the OED's citations, including those illustrating the current meaning.


Text can be used as a verb both transitively and intransitively, in many different ways. It usually means only messaging by SMS (short message service) using mobile telephones. Other forms of textual messaging (such as on Facebook) are not texting.

Here are some examples from the Corpus of Contemporary American English. (They mostly the past tense form texted because the part-of-speech tagger tags all incidences of text as a noun, so it is difficult to find examples of text as a verb.)

Recipient as direct object:

  • And she hasn't texted me all day.
  • I knew it was him because I texted him and I saw him take out his phone
  • Each time I texted a friend or family member to say where I was, the auto correct says I was in tacos and not Taos.

Message as direct object:

  • We have entre into this cozy family scene because Bristol herself texted an invite.
  • Newark mayor Cory Booker's tweet to Snooki, after she texted a post about being stuck in traffic in Newark
  • Sara found out and texted,' We're having a bake-off.'

Transitive uses with a direct object (message) and an indirect object (recipient):

  • " It's time to be the best ever, " a friend texted our new hero before he became just that.
  • Perry, who bounced a plastic bottle off his head at the 2009 VMAs, texted him a photo of her breasts and got their romance started.
  • Tapping on my iPhone, I texted my secret to my teammate, K-9, along with a pic.
  • Shortly before kickoff in the Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas, he texted Gerhart good luck

Intransitive uses:

  • And truckers who texted while driving were twenty-three times more likely than others to have a collision.
  • She always called or texted to let me know when she was home
  • If you're texting a ton, that mystery disappears too quickly and he'll see you more as a friend

Uses with a clause subordinated by that indicating the message:

  • While I drove there Tuesday night, Mike Lynch texted that there were 60 vehicles in line
  • She had texted Tyree that she was pregnant

For sure, the common forms are text, texts, texted, texting, etc. It is a regular verb. That is the way it is used. It is also commonly used as a transitive verb so: "I texted Mary, so please text Sue and I am sure they will text us back." "I texted to Mary" doesn't sound right. However, I think one would text to Facebook, rather than text Facebook, though perhaps others might disagree.


If texting is widely used, texted should only be expected to follow.

Merriam-Webster already lists text, texter, texting and texted in this sense.

"I'd luv it if u can textify ur remarks, I forgot what u said ."