Leave Verb Forms: Present, Past, and Participle
The verb leave is irregular. Its three core forms are: leave (present), left (past), and left (past participle). Unlike many verbs, the past tense and past participle are identical, but the meaning and grammatical use differ depending on the sentence structure. This guide covers every form, common contexts, and the mistakes learners make most often.
Quick Answer: The Three Forms of Leave
- Present: leave / leaves (third person singular)
- Past: left
- Past Participle: left
- Present Participle / Gerund: leaving
Use left for both simple past actions and perfect tenses. For example: I left the office at 5 p.m. (past) and I have left the keys on the table. (past participle).
Present Forms: Leave and Leaves
The present form leave is used with I, you, we, they. Use leaves with he, she, it. These forms describe habitual actions, general truths, or future scheduled events.
Examples in Context
- Habitual: I leave for work at 8 a.m. every day.
- General truth: The train leaves the station on time.
- Scheduled future: She leaves for London next Monday.
Formal vs. Informal Tone
In formal emails, use leave for polite arrangements: I leave the decision to your discretion. In casual conversation, leave often appears in phrasal verbs: Leave it to me. or Leave off the salt.
Past Form: Left
The simple past left describes a completed action in the past. It does not connect to the present.
Natural Examples
- She left the meeting early because she felt unwell.
- They left their hometown in 2019.
- I left a message on your voicemail.
Common Mistake with Past Form
Learners sometimes write leaved or lefted. Both are incorrect. The only correct past form is left.
Past Participle Form: Left
The past participle left is used with auxiliary verbs (have, has, had) to form perfect tenses, and in passive voice.
Examples in Perfect Tenses
- Present perfect: He has left the building.
- Past perfect: They had left before the storm started.
- Future perfect: By noon, she will have left the office.
Passive Voice Example
The documents were left on the desk. (Here, left is the past participle used in passive construction.)
Present Participle / Gerund: Leaving
Leaving is used for continuous tenses and as a gerund (a verb acting as a noun).
Continuous Tenses
- I am leaving now. (present continuous)
- She was leaving when the phone rang. (past continuous)
Gerund Use
- Leaving early is sometimes necessary. (subject of sentence)
- He regrets leaving without saying goodbye. (object of verb)
Comparison Table: Leave vs. Left vs. Leaving
| Form | Use | Example |
|---|---|---|
| leave / leaves | Present tense, future scheduled | I leave at 6 p.m. / She leaves tomorrow. |
| left | Simple past | He left the party early. |
| left | Past participle (perfect tenses, passive) | They have left already. / The door was left open. |
| leaving | Continuous tenses, gerund | We are leaving soon. / Leaving was hard. |
Common Mistakes with Leave
Mistake 1: Confusing Leave and Let
Leave means to go away or abandon. Let means to allow. Incorrect: Leave me go. Correct: Let me go.
Mistake 2: Using Left as Present
Incorrect: I left the house every morning. (This implies a past habit, not present.) Correct: I leave the house every morning.
Mistake 3: Forgetting the Past Participle in Perfect Tenses
Incorrect: I have leave the keys. Correct: I have left the keys.
Better Alternatives and When to Use Them
Sometimes leave is too direct. Consider these alternatives for nuance:
- Depart – More formal. Use in official announcements: The flight departs at 3 p.m.
- Abandon – Stronger, implies leaving permanently or irresponsibly: They abandoned the project.
- Quit – Informal, for jobs or habits: She quit her job.
- Set off – Phrasal verb for beginning a journey: We set off at dawn.
Use leave for everyday situations. Use depart in formal writing or travel contexts. Use abandon only when the leaving is final or negative.
Context Notes: Email, Conversation, and Nuance
Email Context
In professional emails, leave is common in polite requests: Please leave the report on my desk. Or in notifications: I will leave the office early today. Avoid abandon in professional settings unless the meaning is literal.
Conversation Context
In casual talk, leave often appears in phrasal verbs: Leave out the details. or Leave behind your worries. The past participle left is used for forgotten items: I left my phone at home.
Nuance: Leave vs. Forget
Leave can mean you intentionally or unintentionally did not take something. Forget always implies unintentional. Example: I left my umbrella at work. (could be intentional or not) vs. I forgot my umbrella. (always unintentional).
Mini Practice: Test Your Understanding
Fill in the blank with the correct form of leave.
- She always _______ for school at 7:30 a.m.
- Yesterday, they _______ the restaurant without paying.
- I have _______ my backpack in the car.
- We are _______ for the airport in an hour.
Answers
- leaves
- left
- left
- leaving
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is it “leave it to me” or “left it to me”?
Use leave it to me when asking someone to trust you with a task. Left it to me is past tense: He left it to me to finish the work.
2. Can I use “left” as an adjective?
Yes. Left can mean remaining: There is some food left. Or opposite of right: Turn left. These are different words, but the spelling is the same.
3. What is the difference between “leave” and “live”?
Leave (pronounced /liːv/) means to go away. Live (pronounced /lɪv/) means to be alive or reside. They sound different and have different meanings.
4. Is “leaved” ever correct?
No. Leaved is not a standard English verb form. The only correct forms are leave, leaves, left, leaving.
For more help with verb forms, visit our Verb Forms Explained section. If you have questions about past tense or past participle patterns, check Past Tense Forms and Past Participle Forms. For common errors, see Common Verb Mistakes. You can also read our Editorial Policy to understand how we create these guides.
