Everything about Verb Conjugation totally explained
In
linguistics,
conjugation is the creation of derived forms of a
verb from its
principal parts by
inflection (regular alteration according to rules of
grammar). Conjugation may be affected by
person,
number,
gender,
tense,
aspect,
mood,
voice, or other grammatical categories. All the different forms of the same verb constitute a
lexeme and the form of the verb that's conventionally used to represent the canonical form of the verb is a
lemma.
Conjugated forms of a verb which show a given person, number, tense, etc. are called
finite forms. In many languages there are also one or more several
non-finite forms, such as the
infinitive or the
gerund. A table giving all the conjugated variants of a verb in a given language is called a
conjugation table or a
verb paradigm.
A
regular verb has a paradigm of conjugation that derives all forms from a few specific forms or
principal parts (maybe only one, such as the infinitive in English). When a verb can't be conjugated straightforwardly like this, it's said to be
irregular. Typically the principal parts are the
root and/or several modifications of it (
stems).
Conjugation is also the traditional name of a group of verbs that share a similar conjugation pattern in a particular language (a
verb class). This is the sense in which teachers say that
Latin has four conjugations of verbs. This means that any regular Latin verb can be conjugated in any person, number, tense, mood, and voice by knowing which of the four conjugation groups it belongs to, and its principal parts.
Examples
Indo-European languages usually
inflect verbs for several grammatical categories in complex
paradigms, although some, like English, have simplified verb conjugation to a large extent. Afrikaans and Swedish have gone even further and virtually abandoned verb conjugation altogether. Below is the conjugation of the verb
to be in the present tense, indicative mood, active voice, in
English,
German,
Dutch,
Afrikaans,
Icelandic,
Swedish,
Latvian,
Bulgarian,
Serbo-Croatian,
Polish,
Hindi,
Persian,
Latin,
French,
Italian,
Spanish,
Portuguese,
Albanian,
Ancient Attic Greek and
Modern Greek. This is usually the most irregular verb. You may notice the similarities in corresponding verb forms. For simplicity, the personal pronouns have been omitted, and only the conjugated verb is shown.
| Branch |
Germanic |
Italic |
| Person & number |
English |
German |
Dutch |
Afrikaans |
Icelandic |
Swedish |
Latin |
Italian |
French |
Spanish |
Portuguese |
Romanian |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1st singular |
am |
bin |
ben |
is |
er |
är |
sum |
sono |
suis |
soy |
sou |
sunt |
| 2nd singular |
are/art1 |
bist |
ben(t)/zijt1 |
is |
ert |
är |
es |
sei |
es |
eres |
és |
eşti |
| 3rd singular |
is |
ist |
is |
is |
er |
är |
est |
è |
est |
es |
é |
este |
| 1st plural |
are |
sind |
zijn |
is |
erum |
är |
sumus |
siamo |
sommes |
somos |
somos |
suntem |
| 2nd plural |
are |
seid |
zijn/zijt1 |
is |
eruð |
är |
estis |
siete |
êtes |
sois |
sois |
sunteţi |
| 3rd plural |
are |
sind |
zijn |
is |
eru |
är |
sunt |
sono |
sont |
son |
são |
sunt |
| Branch |
Greek |
Albanian |
Slavic |
Baltic |
Indo-Iranian |
| Person & number |
Ancient (Attic)2 |
Modern3 |
Polish |
Serbo-Croatian4 |
Bulgarian5 |
Latvian |
Lithuanian |
Persian |
Hindi |
| eînai |
(eínai)7 |
none (ptc: ) |
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
|
| 1st singular |
eimí |
eímai |
jam |
jestem |
jesam, sam |
săm |
esmu |
esu |
hastam |
hoon |
| 2nd singular |
eî |
eísai |
je |
jesteś |
jesi, si |
si |
esi |
esi |
hasti |
hai |
| 3rd singular |
estí |
eínai |
është/asht6 |
jest |
jest(e), je |
e |
ir |
yra |
hast |
hai |
| 1st plural |
esmén |
eímaste |
jemi |
jesteśmy |
jesmo, smo |
sme |
esam |
esame |
hastim |
hain |
| 2nd plural |
esté |
eíste |
jeni |
jesteście |
jeste, ste |
ste |
esat |
esate |
hastid |
ho |
| 3rd plural |
eisí |
eínai |
janë |
są |
jesu, su |
să |
ir |
yra |
hastand |
hain |
» 1 Archaic, not used in the modern language.
2 The verbs have been transliterated, to facilitate the comparison with other languages. In the Greek alphabet, they're written as follows, from top to bottom: εἶναι, εἰμί, εἶ, ἐστί, ἐσμέν, ἐστέ, εἰσί. » 3 The verbs have been transliterated, to facilitate the comparison with other languages. In the Greek alphabet, they're written as follows, from top to bottom: είμαι, είσαι, είναι, είμαστε, είστε, είναι.
4 The verbs have been transliterated, to facilitate the comparison with other languages. In the Cyrillic alphabet, they're written as follows, from top to bottom: бити, јесам/сам, јеси/си, јест(е)/је, јесмо/смо, јесте/сте, јесу/су. The latter forms are clitics. » 5 The verbs have been transliterated, to facilitate the comparison with other languages. In the Cyrillic alphabet, they're written as follows, from top to bottom: бити, съм, си, е, сме, сте, са.
6 In the Tosk and Geg dialects, respectively. » 7 Used as a noun ("being, existence").
Verbal agreement
Verbal agreement or
concord is a
morpho-
syntactic construct in which properties of the
subject and/or
objects of a
verb are indicated by the verb form. Verbs are then said to
agree with their subjects (resp. objects).
Many
English verbs exhibit subject agreement of the following sort: whereas
I go,
you go,
we go,
they go are all grammatical in standard English,
she go is not. Instead, a special form of the verb
to go has to be used to produce
she goes. On the other hand
I goes,
you goes etc. are not grammatical in standard English. (Things are different in some English dialects that lack agreement.) A few English verbs have no special forms that indicate subject agreement (
I may,
you may,
she may), and the verb
to be has an additional form
am that can only be used with the pronoun
I as the subject.
Verbs in written
French exhibit a richer agreement
morphology than English verbs:
je suis (I am),
tu es ("you are", singular
informal),
elle est (she is),
nous sommes (we are),
vous êtes ("you are", plural),
ils sont (they are). Historically, English used to have a similar verbal paradigm. Some historic verb forms are used by
Shakespeare as slightly archaic or more formal variants (
I do,
thou dost,
she doth, typically used by nobility) of the modern forms.
Some languages with verbal agreement can leave certain subjects implicit when the subject is fully determined by the verb form. In
Spanish, for instance, certain subject pronouns don't need to be explicitly present, even though in French, its close relative, they're obligatory. The Spanish equivalent to the French
je suis (I am) can be simply
soy (lit. "am"). The pronoun
yo (I) in the explicit form
yo soy is only required for emphasis or to clear ambiguity in complex texts.
Some languages have a richer agreement system in which verbs also agree with some or all of their objects.
Ubykh exhibits verbal agreement for the subject, direct object, indirect object, benefaction and ablative objects (
a.w3.s.xe.n.t'u.n,
you gave it to him for me).
Basque can show agreement not only for subject, direct object and indirect object, but it also on occasion exhibits agreement for the listener as the implicit benefactor:
autoa digute means "they brought us the car" (neuter agreement for listener), but
autoa zigunate means "they brought us the car" (agreement for feminine singular listener).
Languages with a rich agreement morphology facilitate relatively free word order without leading to increased ambiguity. The canonical word order in Basque is Subject-Object-Verb. However, all permutations of subject verb and object are permitted as well.
Factors that affect conjugation
Common
grammatical categories according to which verbs can be conjugated are the following:
Other factors which may affect conjugation are:
Degree of formality
Inclusiveness and exclusiveness in the 1st. person plural
Transitivity
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