Imperfect conjugation chart

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Imperfect conjugation chart

In Stage 1 we looked at verbs in the present tense. For example: Present tense Ego Lucie nuntium do ? I give a message to Lucy We also looked at verbs in the past tense For example: Past tense (perfect) Ego Lucie nuntium dedi ? I gave a message to Lucy This kind of past tense is called a perfect tense. It is used to describe an action in the past which is completed. To describe a past action or state which is incomplete, we use an imperfect tense. This tense indicates an action which has gone on over a period time or has happened frequently. It is translated into English by `was/were' + `-ing' or `used to'. For example: Past tense (imperfect) Ego Lucie nuntium dabam ? I was giving a message to Lucy Just as with the present and perfect tenses, we need to know the conjugation a verb belongs to in order to make an imperfect tense. Remember Latin verbs are divided into four groups, or conjugations. In each conjugation, the verbs share the same endings: An example of a first conjugation verb is: confirmo, confirmare, confirmavi, confirmatum (1) ? to confirm. An example of a second conjugation verb is: habeo, habere, habui, habitum (2) ? to have An example of a third conjugation verb is: duco, ducere, duxi, ductum (3) ? to lead An example of a fourth conjugation verb is: audio, audire, audivi, auditum (4) ? to hear The endings for the imperfect tense are similar to those of the present tense. Present tense endings Latin English -o I (first person singular) -s you (second person singular) -t he/she/it (third person singular) -mus we (first person plural) -tis you (second person plural) -nt they (third person plural) The difference is that they are preceded by `ba-' and, in the first person singular, the characteristic `-o' of the present changes to `-m' in the imperfect. For example: Imperfect tense endings Latin English -bam I -bas you (singular) -bat he/she/it -bamus we -batis you (plural) -bant they To form the imperfect tense, remove `-re' from the infinitive form of the verb and add the relevant ending above. However, if the verb is in the fourth conjugation, you will need to add an `-e' before adding the relevant ending. For example: Imperfect tense of do, dare, dedi, datum (1) to give Latin English dabam I was giving, I used to give dabas you were giving, you used to give dabat he/she/it was giving, he/she/it used to give dabamus we were giving, we used to give dabatis you were giving, you used to give dabant they were giving, they used to give Imperfect tense of audio, audire, audivi, auditum (4) to hear Latin English audiebam I was hearing, I used to hear audiebas you were hearing, you used to hear audiebat he/she/it was hearing, he/she/it used to hear audiebamus we were hearing, we used to hear audiebatis you were hearing, you used to hear audibant they were hearing, they used to hear Handy hint Two irregular verbs you will frequently come across are `esse', `to be', and `ire', `to go'. It is well worth learning their imperfect forms. The imperfect tense of sum, esse, fui, -, `to be' is formed as follows: Latin English eram I was eras you were erat he/she/it was eramus we were eratis you were erant they were The imperfect tense of eo, ire, ivi, itum `to go' is formed as follows: Latin English ibam I was going, I used to go ibas you were going, you used to go ibat he/she/it was going, he/she/it used to go ibamus we were going, we used to go ibatis you were going, you used to go ibant they were going, they used to go Checklist Are you confident with the meaning of an imperfect tense? the form of an imperfect tense? the meaning of the irregular verbs `esse' and `ire' in the imperfect tense? the form of the irregular verbs `esse' and `ire' in the imperfect tense? What next? The Imperfect tense typically refers to the imperfect aspect in the past time. This is the only place where the imperfect aspect is formally distinguished from the simple aspect (that is, the Present Tense serves both for the Simple Present and the Present Imperfective, as does the Future Tense). This typically narrative tense describes actions as ongoing, continuous, habitual or attempted in the past. (It must be distinguished in your translations from the perfect, which describes completed action.) The imperfect is translated as "I was praising", "I used to praise", "I kept on praising," or "I began to praise".The imperfect indicative active is formed by finding the present stem (the 2nd principle part less the final "-re"), adding the infix "-ba-", and then adding the personal endings. So:However, by a process of analogy the Romans began to think of the ending of the imperfect as -ybam ... for every verb conjugation except the first conjugation, which was -nbam. This is how that happened:For most of Historical Latin, the only two conjugations that Romans used to create new verbs were the first conjugation (-nre) for creating transitive verbs and the second conjugation (-yre) for creating intransitive verbs. These are called "Active Conjugations". The similarity of the second conjugation with its long-e stem, habybam to the third conjugation, with it short-e stem, vivebam, appears to have lengthened the short -e- of vivebam to vivybam, by analogy. Once that happened, it was not much of a step to lengthen the short -e- of the third -io conjugation as well, and so the Romans began saying, capiybam. Inevitably the long -i- of the fourth conjugation, sentibam, became the familiar sentiybam. As a result, it may be useful to think of the imperfect tense as marked by -ybam everywhere except in the first conjugation where the ending is -nbam.To form the Imperfect active subjunctive, simply add the personal endings on to the present active infinitive (the 2nd principle part): for example SingularlaudaremlaudareslaudaretPlurallaudaremuslaudaretislaudarentFor more information on forms, check the paradigm pages: paradigms We use cookies to improve your experience on our site. By pressing ACCEPT, you agree to our use of cookies to process your personal data to personalize your experience. Grammatical construct combining past tense with continuing aspect For other uses, see Imperfect (disambiguation). The imperfect (abbreviated IMPERF) is a verb form that combines past tense (reference to a past time) and imperfective aspect (reference to a continuing or repeated event or state). It can have meanings similar to the English "was walking" or "used to walk." It contrasts with preterite forms, which refer to a single completed event in the past. Traditionally, the imperfect of languages such as Latin and French is referred to as one of the tenses, although it actually encodes aspectual information in addition to tense (time reference). It may be more precisely called past imperfective.[1] English has no general imperfective and expresses it in different ways. The term "imperfect" in English refers to forms much more commonly called past progressive or past continuous (e.g. "was doing" or "were doing"). These are combinations of past tense with specifically continuous or progressive aspect. In German, Imperfekt formerly referred to the simply conjugated past tense (to contrast with the Perfekt or compound past form), but the term Pr?teritum (preterite) is now preferred, since the form does not carry any implication of imperfective aspect. "Imperfect" comes from the Latin imperfectus "unfinished",[2] because the imperfect expresses an ongoing, uncompleted action. The equivalent Ancient Greek term was paratatik?s "prolonged".[3] Indo-European languages English Imperfect meanings in English are expressed in different ways depending on whether the event is continuous or habitual. For a continuous action (one that was in progress at a particular time in the past), the past progressive (past continuous) form is used, as in "I was eating"; "They were running fast." However certain verbs that express state rather than action do not mark the progressive aspect (see Uses of English verb forms ? Progressive); in these cases the simple past tense is used instead: "He was hungry"; "We knew what to do next." Habitual (repeated) action in the past can be marked by used to, as in "I used to eat a lot", or by the auxiliary verb would, as in "Back then, I would eat early and would walk to school." (The auxiliary would also has other uses, such as expressing conditional mood.)[4] However, in many cases the habitual nature of the action does not need to be explicitly marked on the verb, and the simple past is used: "We always ate dinner at six o'clock." Italic languages Latin Conjugation of the imperfect indicative: parre docre legere capere scre esse ego parbam docbam legbam capibam scibam eram t parbs docbas legbs capibs scibs ers is parbat docbat legbat capibat scibat erat ns parbmus docbmus legbmus capibmus scibmus ermus vs parbtis docbtis legbtis capibtis scibtis ertis e parbant docbant legbant capibant scibant erant Notes: The imperfect is signified by the signs ba and eb. The imperfect forms of esse are used as auxiliary verbs in the pluperfect of the passive voice along with perfect passive participles. Romance languages In Romance languages, the imperfect is generally a past tense. Its uses include representing: Repetition and continuity: an action that was happening, used to happen, or happened regularly in the past, as it was ongoing A description of people, things, or conditions of the past A time in the past A relation between past happenings: a situation that was in progress in the past or a condition originated in a previous time, when another isolated and important event occurred (the first verb, indicating the status in progress or condition from the past using the imperfect, while the latter uses the preterite). A physical or mental state or condition in progress in the past. Often used with verbs of being, emotion, capability, or conscience. A common mistake of beginners learning a Romance language is putting too much emphasis on whether the time the action occurred is known. This generally does not affect how the imperfect is used. For example, the sentence "Someone ate all of my cookies." (when translated) is not a good candidate for the imperfect. Fundamentally, it is no different from the sentence "We ate all the cookies." Note this fails the repeatability requirement of the imperfect, as it is only known to have happened once. On the other hand, the sentence "I used to have fun in the 1960s." is a good candidate for the imperfect, even though its period is known. In short, knowing when an action occurred is not nearly as important as how long it occurred (or was and still is occurring). French To form the imperfect for French regular verbs, take the first person plural present tense, the "nous" (we) form, subtract the -ons suffix, and add the appropriate ending (the forms for ?tre (to be), whose "nous" form does not end in -ons, are irregular; they start with ?t- but have the same endings). Verbs that terminate in a stem of -cer and -ger undergo minor orthographic changes to preserve the phonetic sound or allophone. Verbs whose root terminates in the letter "i" maintain the letter despite the consecutiveness in the "nous" and "vous" forms. It is used to express the ideas of habitual actions or states of being; physical and emotional descriptions: time, weather, age, feelings; actions or states of an unspecified duration; background information in conjunction with the pass? compos?; wishes or suggestions; conditions in "si" clauses; the expressions "?tre en train de" and "venir de" in the past. parler choisir vendre ?tre commencer manger ?tudier je -ais parlais choisissais vendais ?tais commen?ais mangeais ?tudiais tu -ais parlais choisissais vendais ?tais commen?ais mangeais ?tudiais il -ait parlait choisissait vendait ?tait commen?ait mangeait ?tudiait nous -ions parlions choisissions vendions ?tions commencions mangions ?tudiions vous -iez parliez choisissiez vendiez ?tiez commenciez mangiez ?tudiiez ils -aient parlaient choisissaient vendaient ?taient commen?aient mangeaient ?tudiaient Italian Conjugation of the imperfect indicative: avere essere parlare credere finire dire opporre io avevo ero parlavo credevo finivo dicevo opponevo tu avevi eri parlavi credevi finivi dicevi opponevi lui aveva era parlava credeva finiva diceva opponeva noi avevamo eravamo parlavamo credevamo finivamo dicevamo opponevamo voi avevate eravate parlavate credevate finivate dicevate opponevate loro avevano erano parlavano credevano finivano dicevano opponevano Notes: Dropping the -re suffix and adding -vo, -vi, -va, -vamo, -vate, and -vano form verbs. Although dire and opporre (as all the composite forms of verb porre and dire) may seem irregular, they are a part of a verb family that has stronger roots to Latin equivalents (lat. pnere/pnbam and dcere/dcbam). Other verbs include fare(infinitive)/faccio(present tense)/facevo(imperfect) (lat.facere/facio/facibam), bere/bevo/bevevo (bibere/bibo/bibbam), trarre/traggo/traevo (trahere/traho/trahbam), durre/duco/ducevo[obs.] (dcere/dco/dcbam) and all their composite forms.. There is another imperfect in Italian formed by combining the imperfect of the verb stare (stavo, stavi, stava, stavamo, stavate, stavano) with the gerund. For example, "parlavo" could be said as "stavo parlando". The difference is similar to the difference between "I eat" and "I am eating" in English. However, English does not make this distinction in the imperfect. Romanian Conjugation of the imperfect indicative: c?nta(re) crede(re) plcea (plcere) dormi(re) fi(re) eu c?ntam credeam plceam dormeam eram tu c?ntai credeai plceai dormeai erai el/ea c?nta credea plcea dormea era noi c?ntam credeam plceam dormeam eram voi c?ntai credeai plceai dormeai erai ei c?ntau credeau plceau dormeau erau Notes: The imperfect is formed from the short infinitive form of the verbs (without the -re suffix) combined with the -am, -ai, -a, -am, -ai, and -au endings. Short infinitives ending in ,,-a" (1st conjugation) don't double this letter: e.g. "pleca" in the first person singular is "plecam" and not "plecaam"). Short infinitives ending in "-i" take the pattern of those ending in "-e" (e.g. dormi becomes dormeam in 1st person imperfect), while short infinitives ending in "-?" take the pattern of those ending in "-a" (e.g. hotr? becomes hotram in 1st person imperfect). There is only one irregular verb in the imperfect: a fi, that is created from the radical era-, instead of fi-. Spanish In Spanish, the imperfect can be called the imperfecto or the copret?rito. Conjugation of the imperfect indicative: hablar comer insistir ir ser ver yo hablaba com?a insist?a iba era ve?a t? hablabas com?as insist?as ibas eras ve?as ?l hablaba com?a insist?a iba era ve?a nosotros habl?bamos com?amos insist?amos ?bamos ?ramos ve?amos vosotros hablabais com?ais insist?ais ibais erais ve?ais ellos hablaban com?an insist?an iban eran ve?an There are only three irregular verbs in the imperfect: ir, ser, and ver. Historically, ir -- unlike other Spanish "-ir verbs" -- failed to drop the -b- of the Latin imperfect. The imperfect of ser is likewise a continuation of the Latin imperfect (of esse), with the same stem appearing in t? eres (thanks to pre-classical Latin rhotacism). The imperfect of ver (ve?a etc.) was historically considered regular in Old Spanish, where the infinitive veer provided the stem ve-, but that is no longer the case in standard Spanish. In formal language, pronouns "t?" and "vosotros" are replaced by "usted" and "ustedes" (sometimes abbreviated as Ud./Vd. and Uds./Vds.), with the verb conjugated in third person. American Spanish always replaces "vosotros" with "ustedes", switching the verb accordingly. The countries that show the kind of voseo in which "t?" is replaced by "vos" use the same forms as for "t?" in this tense. The first person singular and third person singular forms are the same for all verbs; thus, in cases of ambiguity where context is insufficient, a pronoun or subject noun is included for the sake of clarification. Portuguese In Portuguese, the imperfect indicative, called "pret?rito imperfeito", is quite similar to Spanish: cantar bater partir p?r ser ter vir eu cantava batia partia punha era tinha vinha tu cantavas batias partias punhas eras tinhas vinhas ele/ela/voc? cantava batia partia punha era tinha vinha n?s cant?vamos bat?amos part?amos p?nhamos ?ramos t?nhamos v?nhamos v?s cant?veis bat?eis part?eis p?nheis ?reis t?nheis v?nheis eles/elas/voc?s cantavam batiam partiam punham eram tinham vinham There are four irregular verbs: "p?r" (to put), "ser" (to be), "ter" (to have) and "vir" (to come). Unlike in Spanish, the verbs "ver" (to see) and "ir" (to go) are regular in the Portuguese imperfect. Like in Italian, it is also commonly formed by combining the imperfect of the verb estar (estava, estavas, estava, est?vamos, est?veis, estavam) with the gerund (for example, "falando", the gerund form of "falar", to speak, to talk). In Brazilian Portuguese, both in informal oral speech and informal written language (for example, online or phone texting), it is more common to use the composite "estava falando" (commonly reduced to "tava falando"), than to use the synthetic "falava", which is more common in formal written forms. Both in European and Brazilian Portuguese, the synthetic pluperfect ("eu falara" "I had spoken") is considered old-fashioned and never used in spoken communication - it is substituted by the composite "eu tinha falado", which is formed with the imperfect form of the verb "ter" (to have) (tinha tinhas tinha t?nhamos t?nheis tinham) plus the past participle ("falado"). Galician Similar to the closely related Portuguese, as well as to Spanish, but often called "copret?rito" (from co-, same particle found in English "collaboration" and "coexistence", plus "pret?rito", which is "past tense", in reference of it being a second past tense that exists along the regular one). Same as with them, in formal usage "ti" and "v?s/vosoutros" change to "vostede" and "vostedes" and are followed by the third person. In verbs ended in -aer, -oer, -a?r and -o?r, the first and second person of the plural show the presence of a diaeresis. cantar bater partir p?r moer eu cantaba bat?a part?a pu?a mo?a ti cantabas batias part?as pu?as mo?as el/ela/vostede cantaba bat?a part?a pu?a mo?a n?s/nosoutros cant?bamos bat?amos part?amos pu?amos mo?amos v?s/vosoutros cant?bades bat?ades part?ades pu?ades mo?ades eles/elas/vostedes cantaban bat?an part?an pu?an mo?a Indo-Aryan languages Hindi Hindi, an Indo-Aryan language, has indicative imperfect tense conjugation only for the verb (hon) [to be] and the rest of the verbs lack this conjugation. The indicative imperfect forms of (hon) comes from Sanskrit (stita) "standing, situated" which are derived from the PIE root *steh- ("to stand").[5] The imperfect conjugation is derived from a participle form and hence its conjugations agree only with the number and gender of the grammatical person and not the pronoun itself. So, the grammatically singular pronouns (e.g., ma i "I" and t "you" etc.) are assigned the singular imperfect forms (i.e. th or th) depending on the gender of the person or the noun they refer to, and the grammatically plural pronouns (e.g. ham "we" etc.) are assigned the plural imperfect forms ( th and thm ). An exception to this is the pronoun (tum) which takes in the plural imperfect form ( th) in masculine gender but singular form ( th) in feminine gender. These imperfect conjugations also act as copula to form the imperfect past forms for the three grammatical aspects that Hindi has Habitual, Perfective, and Progressive aspects. Imperfect Past Copula Gender Singular Plural th th th thm Imperfect Past Conjugations Aspect Singular Plural Translation (3rd person only) 1P 2P 3P 2P 1P 3P ma i t ye/vo tum p ham ye/vo Simple th th he was th thm she was Habitual bolt th bolt th he used to speak bolt th bolt thm she used to speak Progressive bol rah th bol rah th he was speaking bol rah th bol rah thm she was speaking Note The 2P pronouns 'p' & 'tum' although grammatically plural but are used as singular pronouns, akin to English pronoun 'you'. Assamese In Assamese, two imperfect forms are recognised present progressive and/or present perfect & past progressive and/or remote past. There is only one periphrastic tense which functions as both the present progressive and present perfect with reference to the setting in which is placed.[citation needed] Tense 1P 2P 3P intimate familiar formal Imperfective Present bulis? buliso bulisa bulise Past bulisil? bulisili bulisila bulisile Continuous Present buli as? buli aso buli asa buli ase Past buli asil? buli asili buli asila buli asile Future buli thakim buli thakibi buli thakiba buli thakibo Indo-Iranian languages Persian Like all other past tenses, imperfect is conjugated regularly for all verbs. Formation: [preverb] + mi- + past stem + past ending. Conjugation of the imperfect indicative for the first person singular is shown in the table below raftan (to go) k?r kardan (to work) 1st sg. miraftam k?r mikardam Slavic languages Most Slavic languages have lost the imperfect but it is preserved in Bulgarian and Macedonian. It is also officially retained in Serbian and Croatian but is considered old-fashioned and restricted to literature for poetic and stylistic reasons. Turkish Turkish has separate tenses for past continuous and imperfect. To form the past continuous tense for Turkish verbs, after removing the infinitive suffix (-mek or -mak), take the present continuous tense suffix "-yor" without personal suffixes, and add the ending for the simple past plus the appropriate personal suffix As -du (which has a rounded back vowel) succeeds -lar (which has an unrounded back vowel), instead of -yor (which has a rounded back vowel) when the subject is the third person plural onlar, it becomes -di (which has an unrounded back vowel). If a verb ends in t, it may change into d (especially gitmek and etmek). If a verb ends in open vowels (a or e), the open vowels become closed while adding -yor (because of the closed auxiliary vowel -i-). a becomes i if the preceding vowel is unrounded, u if it is rounded (ala -> aliyor, topla -> topluyor) e becomes i if the preceding vowel is unrounded, ? if it is rounded (bekle -> bekliyor, s?yle -> s?yl?yor) If the verb ends in a consonant, the auxiliary vowel -i- must be added before -yor. It becomes -i-, -u- or -?- depending on the frontness and roundedness of the preceding vowel, because of the vowel harmony: -i if the preceding vowel is e or i (front unrounded): gel -> geliyor -i if the preceding vowel is a or i (back unrounded): bak -> bakiyor -u if the preceding vowel is o or u (back rounded): kork -> korkuyor -? if the preceding vowel is ? or ? (front rounded): g?r -> g?r?yor r of -yor may be dropped in colloquial speech. To form the negative of the past continuous tense, the negation suffix "-ma/-me", which becomes -mi, -mi, -mu, or -m? because of the closed auxiliary vowel and the vowel harmony, must be added before -yor. Examples: gelmek gitmek alamak beklemek toplamak s?ylemek satmak ben gelmiyordum gitmiyordum alamiyordum beklemiyordum toplamiyordum s?ylemiyordum satmiyordum sen gelmiyordun gitmiyordun alamiyordun beklemiyordun toplamiyordun s?ylemiyordun satmiyordun o gelmiyordu gitmiyordu alamiyordu beklemiyordu toplamiyordu s?ylemiyordu satmiyordu biz gelmiyorduk gitmiyorduk alamiyorduk beklemiyorduk toplamiyorduk s?ylemiyorduk satmiyorduk siz gelmiyordunuz gitmiyordunuz alamiyordunuz beklemiyordunuz toplamiyordunuz s?ylemiyordunuz satmiyordunuz onlar gelmiyorlardi gitmiyorlardi alamiyorlardi beklemiyorlardi toplamiyorlardi s?ylemiyorlardi satmiyorlardi The epenthetic consonant y is inserted between -mu and -du. As -mu and -du (which have a rounded back vowel) succeeds -lar (which has an unrounded back vowel) instead of -yor (which has a rounded back vowel) when the subject is the third person plural, onlar, they become -mi and -di (which have an unrounded back vowel). Semitic languages Semitic languages, especially the ancient forms, do not make use of the imperfect (or perfect) tense with verbs. Instead, they use the imperfective and perfective aspects, respectively. Aspects are similar to tenses, but differ by requiring contextual comprehension to know whether the verb indicates a completed or non-completed action. Dravidian languages Malayalam In Malayalam (verbs are never conjugated for grammatical person, which is indicated by a pronoun), there are two indicative imperfects, corresponding exactly with English: 1 - (ukayyirunnu) endings (... was...), for example: (ukayyirunnu) ... was running 2 - (umyirunnu) endings (... used to ...), for example: (umyirunnu) ... used to run To form the "was doing" imperfect, take the infinitive ending in (uka), for example (uka) - to run - and add the ending - (yyirunnu). To form the "used to do" imperfect, take off the (ka) from the end of the "uka" form and add (myirunnu) in its stead. To make a verb in the imperfect negative, add (all) after the (ukaya) part of the ending for the "was doing" imperfect. For example, (ukayallyirunnu) (...was not running). To do the same for the "used to do" imperfect, take off the (uma) from the ending and add (attilla) instead. For example, (attillyirunnu) (...didn't use to run) References ^ Bernard Comrie, Tense, 1985, pp. 6-7. ^ imperfectus. Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short. A Latin Dictionary on Perseus Project. ^ . Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek?English Lexicon at the Perseus Project. ^ "UltraLingua Online Dictionary & Grammar, "Conditional tense"". Archived from the original on 2009-10-11. ^ Pokorny, J. (2007). Proto-Indo-European Etymological Dictionary. Indo-European Language Revival Association. pp. 2906?2914. Retrieved from " imperfect conjugation chart spanish. tener imperfect conjugation chart. ser imperfect conjugation chart. hacer imperfect conjugation chart. preterite and imperfect conjugation chart. ver imperfect conjugation chart. ir imperfect conjugation chart. estar imperfect conjugation chart

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