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Russian Grammar Verbs
Russian

In English we say, "I study," "you study," "he studies," "she studies," "we study," "they study." Note that some pronouns use "study," while other pronouns use "studies." (Strangely, what looks like a plural verb is not used with the only two plural pronoun—"they" and "we"!) "Verb conjugation" is how verbs change with pronouns. English has simple two-form verb conjugation ("conjugate" comes from the Latin term for "yoked together" because English verbs come in pairs; "conjugal," meaning yoked together in marriage, comes from the same root).

Russian verbs conjugate in seven forms, for the infinitive or dictionary form, and for the six pronouns "I," "you (informal)," "he" and "she," "we," "you (formal)," and "they."

Russian verbs conjugate in two regular patterns. In other words, some verbs are first conjugation, when others are second conjugation.

All verbs have an infinitive form, which is listed in dictionaries. Typically this form ends in ть.

Every russian verb has two indicative forms: past form and present-future form. If you want to know the right way to conjugate a verb in indicative, you must know it's three basic forms: muscle formof past tens, prent form to pronoun "I" and to pronoun "HE/SHE/IT".

For example:

знать: pt знал, pr знаю, знает; to know, some man knew, I know, he/she/it knows.

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First Conjugation



First-conjugation verbs usually end in ать. These verbs conjugate by dropping the ть and replacing it with the following endings. Читать means "to read". Жить means "to live" (usually in a place).

To construct the form for pronoun "I", we takes first person form of pr from a dictionary, to construct other personal forms, we take the same first letter of ending, as for third person of pr in a dictionary.
English ending  
infinitive тьчитать ("cheetat")жить ("zheet")
Iяю or учитаю ("cheet-a-you")живу ("zheevoo")
you (informal)тыешь or ёшьчитаешь ("cheet-a-yesh")живёшь ("zheevyosh")
he, sheон/онает or ётчитает ("cheet-a-yet")живёт ("zheevyot")
weмы ем or ёмчитаем ("cheet-a-yem") живём ("zheevyom")
you (formal or plural)выете or ётечитаете ("cheet-a-yehta") живёте ( "zheevyota")
theyониют or утчитают ("cheet-a-yout") живут ("zheevoot")

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Second Conjugation



Second-conjugation verbs usually end in ить. These verbs conjugate by dropping the ть and replacing it with the following endings. Говорить means "to talk".
English ending  
infinitive ть говорить ("govoreet")
Iяюговорю ("govor-you")
you (informal)тыишьговоришь ("govor-eesh")
he, sheон/онаитговорит ("govor-eet")
weмы имговорим ("govor-eem")
you (formal or plural)выитеговорите ("govor-eetyeh")
theyониятговорят ("govor-yat")
Note that verbs with они conjugate with ят, not ит!

Rule of thumb: In the present and futures tenses (which will be looked at later on), you can omit the pronoun as the stem ending indicates who performs the action. i.e, you can just say "чита́ю " (I read/ I am reading) or "говори́шь" (You speak/ you are speaking) and people will still understand you. This is not the case when talking about the past or conditional tenses of imperfective and perfective verbs (the reasons will be explained later). The same rules also apply in Ukrainian and Belorussian.
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