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EditHow to conjugate verbs / Come coniugare i verbi
EditAuxiliary verbs / Verbi ausiliari
The two most important verbs in Italian, by far, are
avere (to have) and
essere (to be). They are called
verbi ausiliari (auxiliary verbs), and they are irregular in nearly every tense, including the present indicative, sometimes extremely so. Here are their conjugations.
Avere (to have):
| Italian | English |
|---|
| (Io) ho | I have |
| (tu) hai | you (singular) have |
| (lui/lei/Lei) ha | he/she/you (singular formal) has |
| (noi) abbiamo | we have |
| (voi) avete | you (plural) have |
| (loro) hanno | they have |
Essere (to be):
| Italian | English |
|---|
| (Io) sono | I am |
| (tu) sei | you (singular) are |
| (egli(lui)/ella(lei)/Lei) è | he/she/you (singular formal) is |
| (noi) siamo | we are |
| (voi) siete | you (plural) are |
| (loro) sono | they are |
pay attention that be and have verbs in italian have some substition verbs of themself , e.g. essere sometime is substituted by stare, e.g i am loving , io sto amando
EditRegular verbs / Verbi regolari
In Italian, regular verbs are the most common ones. They always end with
-are,
-ere, and
-ire, are the same in the first person (singular and plural) and second person singular. They are different in the third person (singular and plural) and second person plural. According to the different suffix, verbs are assigned to one of the three regular conjugation of verbs in Italian. For instance:
- amare (to love): is a first conjugation verb (prima coniugazione);
- ripetere (to repeat): is a second conjugation verb (seconda coniugazione);
- dormire (to sleep): is a third conjugation verb (terza coniugazione).
Here is a table of the regular present indicative for
-are,
-ere, and
-ire verbs.
| Who | amàre (to love) | ripétere (to repeat) | dormìre (to sleep) |
|---|
| Io | àmo | ripéto | dòrmo |
| tu | àmi | ripéti | dòrmi |
| lui/lei/Lei | àma | ripéte | dòrme |
| noi | amiàmo | ripetiàmo | dormiàmo |
| voi | amàte | ripetéte | dormìte |
| Essi/loro | àmano | ripétono | dòrmono |
It is important to note the change of stress position in different person forms. Regular verbs follow the same position change. Stress is shown in table above to help learning, it is not written in real texts (see
Pronunciation for details on stress).
EditIrregular verbs / Verbi irregolari
In Italian, there are also several irregular verbs. A very few of them do not even apply to the conjugation previously seen, such as
porre (to put down, to place) and
tradurre (to translate); actually they derive from second conjugation (
ponere,
traducere). This is a list of common usage verbs which are known to be irregular, and do not apply to the conjugation rules seen before:
- andare (to go)
- bere (to drink)
- cercare (to seek, to look for)
- dare (to give)
- dire (to say)
- fare (to do, to make)
- piacere (to like)
- stare (to stay, to remain)
- uscire (to leave, to go out)
- venire (to come)
- vivere (to live)
EditModal verbs / Verbi servili
Three other important verbs,
dovere,
potere and
volere, are irregular too; these three particular verbs are known as
verbi servili (modal verbs), as they have the function to "serve" and "support" other infinite verbs. In particular:
- dovere is equivalent to the English modal verb must, but also the have to form: for instance, devo studiare (I have to study, I must study).
- potere is equivalent to the English modal verbs can and may: for instance, puoi andare (You can go, you may go).
- volere expresses willingness to do something, and is actually equivalent to the English verbs to want, to wish and to will; for instance, voglio mangiare (I want to eat). The verb volere can be also used in non-modal forms, that is not in support of an infinite verb.