Make or Made: Understanding the Correct Past Tense of “Make”

by ahmad 60 Make or Made: Understanding the Correct Past Tense of "Make"

Quick Answer

The past tense of make is made. Use made for the past and with “have,” “has,” or “had.”

Every day: I make breakfast.
Yesterday: I made breakfast an hour ago.
Many times: I have made breakfast every day this week.

Make and Made — See the Pattern

Read these sentences. Look at how the verb changes:

  • I make coffee every morning before work. (now — it happens often)
  • She made a beautiful cake for the party last weekend. (past — it is finished)
  • We have made this recipe many times. (past with “have”)

Did you see the pattern? Here is the good news — make only has two forms:

When?FormExample
Now / every daymakeI make dinner at six.
In the pastmadeI made dinner last night.
With have / has / hadmadeI have made dinner already.

Unlike verbs like eat → ate → eaten (three different forms), make uses the same word — made — for both the past and with have/has/had. That makes it easier to learn!

When to Use Make and When to Use Made

Here is the simple rule:

Use “make” when you talk about now, every day, or the future:

  • I make my bed every morning.
  • She makes lunch for her children every day.
  • We will make plans tomorrow.

Use “made” when you talk about the past — or when there is a helping word (have, has, or had) before it:

  • He made a mistake yesterday. (past — it is finished)
  • I have made my decision. (with “have”)
  • She had made dinner before we arrived. (with “had”)

Easy way to remember: Is the action finished or in the past? Use made. Is it happening now or every day? Use make. And never add “-ed” — there is no “maked”!

The Rule in One Line: Now = make. Past or with have/has/had = made. Never “maked.”

How to Use Make and Made in Everyday English

Here are examples you might use every day:

  • She made a cup of tea for her mum. (past — it is finished)
  • They make pizza every Friday night. (now — it happens often)
  • I have made too many mistakes today. (with “have” — use made)
  • He made a promise and kept it. (past — it is finished)
  • We make friends wherever we go. (now — it happens often)

You are doing great. Now let’s look at the mistakes many learners make.

The Most Common Mistake With Make

Even advanced learners sometimes add “-ed” to irregular verbs — so if you have ever written “maked,” you are not alone. Even native speakers’ children say “I maked it” when they are learning to talk.

Mistake 1: Adding -ed (“maked”)

She maked a cake for the party.
She made a cake for the party.

Mistake 2: Using “make” for the past

I make dinner last night.
I made dinner last night.

Mistake 3: Saying “have make” instead of “have made”

I have make a decision.
I have made a decision.

How to remember: “Make” changes to “made” — not “maked.” Think of it like bake → baked (regular) vs make → made (irregular). They look alike, but they work differently!

Other verbs that work like make (same form for past and with have/has/had): teach → taught, buy → bought, think → thought, bring → brought.

Test Yourself: Make or Made?

Choose the correct answer for each sentence. Click Check to see if you are right.

Question 1 of 5

1. She _______ a beautiful cake for my birthday last Saturday.

2. I always _______ my bed before I leave the house.

3. Have you _______ a decision yet?

4. He _______ a big mistake during the exam yesterday.

5. They _______ dinner together every Sunday.

Keep Going — You Are Building Something

You just learned make and made. That is one more irregular verb you will never get wrong again.

But here is something interesting: teach follows the same pattern as make. Teach becomes taught — not “teached.” And just like made, “taught” works for both the past and with have/has/had. But can you use “taught” in every situation? What about “I am teaching“?

Next lesson: What Is the Past Tense of Teach?

Source

make – Wiktionary, the free dictionary

make | Etymology of make by etymonline

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