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What’s the Past Tense of Sleep? Sleeped or Slept?

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Which form of "sleep" correctly completes the sentence?

What’s the past tense of “sleep”? Sleeped or slept?

What’s the past tense of the verb sleep? Is it sleep, sleeped, or slept ? If you guessed sleeped, you may need to flex your grammar skills more often. Stick around—stay awhile.

👍🏼Usage Note

How many hours did you sleep?

He slept soundly throughout the night.

I sleeped on the plane.

She sleep too much.

Forms of the irregular verb sleep

Let’s define the topic first. The verb sleep, as described by Collins Dictionary, “sleep is the natural state of rest in which your eyes are closed, your body is inactive, and your mind does not think.”

present past future
simple I sleep I slept I will sleep
continuous I am sleeping I was sleeping I will be sleeping
perfect I have slept I had slept I will have slept
perfect continuous I have been sleeping I had been sleeping I will have been sleeping
12 verb tenses of ‘sleep‘.
Forms of the verb "sleep" used in text messages.
The verb sleep in text messages. By Gflex on Canva.

Is sleep a regular or irregular verb?

The verb sleep is irregular because it does not end in -ed in either its past tense or past participle form. The difference between regular and irregular verbs is:

Regular verbs end in –ed in their past tense forms. Irregular verbs end in something other than –ed.

The verb sleep belongs to the class of irregular verbs with 2 different verb forms. Here’s a chart of other irregular verbs within the same group.

base verb past tense past participle
dream dreamed/dreamt dreamed/dreamt
burn burned/burnt burned/burnt
sleep slept slept
leap leapt/leaped leapt/leaped
lean leant/leaned leant/leaned
smell smelled/smelt smelt/smelled
Irregular verbs (two past tense conjugations).

What’s the past tense of sleep? Sleeped or slept?

The simple past tense of sleep (rhymes with sheep) is slept (rhymes with wept). But what’s the difference between the simple past tense slept, and the past participle slept? Both forms of the verb are the same and are just slept, so is there even a difference to mention?  See a comparison of the past forms of sleep in context as a simple past tense and a past participle:

I only slept two hours. (simple past)

I wish I had slept more last night. (past participle in the past perfect tense)

Both are in the past tense, and so describe actions or states that have been completed entirely in the past. However, there is still a distinction, though it may not be immediately obvious. What gives away the second sentence as a past participle is the auxiliary that precedes slept, e.g., had. This combination creates the past perfect tense. To create the present perfect, we’d use have + past participle verb form, [slept].

“Sleep” in the present tense (example sentences)

Try and get some sleep.

They were exhausted from lack of sleep.

Last night was very hot and muggy and I didn’t sleep very well.

The noise woke her from a deep sleep.

I couldn’t sleep last night.

💡Study Tip

Practice using the verb in different tenses with example sentences to memorize the correct forms.

“Slept” in the past tense (example sentences)

He slept soundly.

I only slept two hours last night.

I slept well last night.

I slept drowsily with a good feeling for about 2 hours, while rocked by the train.

5. We slept under the open sky.

Examples of slept in the past participle

I had slept for twelve hours by the time I woke up.

The baby had slept through the entire night for the first time.

She was exhausted after having slept poorly the night before.

The students had all slept in and were running late for class.

We had slept in a tent during our camping trip.

Practice questions: forms of “sleep”

Questions Answer options:
1. True or false: “Sleep” is a regular verb. a. true b. false c. both
2. True or false: “To sleep” looks the same in the present and past tense. a. true b. false
Choose the correct verb form to complete each sentence:
3. Try and get some ___. a. sleeping b. slept c. sleep
4. He ___ soundly. a. slept b. sleeping c. sleep
5. They’ve been ___ the entire day. a. slept b. sleeping c. sleep
6. I will go ___ in about an hour or so. a. to sleep b. sleeping c. slept

Answers

  1. b
  2. b
  3. c
  4. a
  5. b
  6. a

Origin of the word “sleep”

From etymology online on sleep (v.):

Old English slæpan “to be or fall asleep; be dormant or inactive” (class VII strong verb; past tense slep, past participle slæpen), from Proto-Germanic *slēpanan.

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Learn more about verbs

Worksheet

Question 1 of 10

What is the past tense of the verb “sleep”?



Which sentence uses the past tense of “sleep” correctly?



Is “sleep” a regular or irregular verb?



Which sentence correctly uses the past participle of “sleep”?



In the sentence “I wish I had ______ more,” what is the correct form of “sleep”?



Last night, I only for three hours.



She soundly all night long.



I wish I longer.



The baby had through the night.



Having well is important for health.





Frequently Asked Questions

Is “sleep” a regular or irregular verb?
+

“Sleep” is an irregular verb. Unlike regular verbs that add “-ed” to form the past tense (e.g., “walked”), “sleep” forms its past tense and past participle as “slept.” This is demonstrated in.

What’s the past tense of “sleep”?
+

The past tense of “sleep” is “slept,” not “sleeped.” The post clarifies that “slept” is used for both simple past tense (“I slept for eight hours”) and past participle (“I had slept soundly”). .

How is “slept” used in a sentence?
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“Slept” functions as both simple past tense and past participle. Examples include: “I slept eight hours” (simple past, describing a completed action), and “I had slept before the storm hit” (past.

What’s the difference between simple past “slept” and past?
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While both use “slept,” the simple past (“I slept”) describes a completed action. The past participle (“I had slept”) requires an auxiliary verb (like “had,” “have,” or “has”) and shows an action.

Is “sleeped” ever correct to use?
+

No, the post explicitly states that “sleeped” is incorrect. The past tense and past participle of “sleep” are both “slept.” Using “sleeped” demonstrates a misunderstanding of irregular verb.

Yash, D. "What’s the Past Tense of Sleep? Sleeped or Slept?." Grammarflex, Jun 7, 2025, https://www.grammarflex.com/whats-the-past-tense-of-sleep-sleep-or-slept/.

Sources

  1. Merriam-Webster, definition of sleep.

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