Verb conjugation is the change of a verb form to show grammatical information such as person, number, tense, mood, aspect, or voice. In many languages, verbs do not appear in only one fixed form. Instead, they change according to the subject, the time of the action, the speaker’s attitude, or the structure of the sentence.
For example, the English verb to write can appear as write, writes, wrote, written, and writing. These forms are connected to the same basic verb, but each one has a different grammatical function. In other languages, especially languages such as Spanish, French, Arabic, Turkish, Russian, and Latin, verb conjugation can be much more extensive.
Verb conjugation is one of the central parts of grammar because verbs usually carry the main action, event, or state in a sentence. A correct verb form helps show who is doing something, when it happens, whether it is real or hypothetical, and how it relates to other parts of the sentence.
Definition
In grammar, to conjugate a verb means to give its different forms according to grammatical categories such as person, number, and tense. A complete set of forms for one verb is often called a conjugation pattern or a verb paradigm.
The word conjugation can refer to two related ideas:
- The process of changing a verb into different grammatical forms.
- A group or class of verbs that follow the same pattern.
For example, in Latin, Spanish, Italian, and French, verbs are often grouped into conjugation classes. These classes help learners predict how a verb changes. In Spanish, verbs ending in -ar, -er, and -ir belong to different conjugation groups.
Verb Forms and the Infinitive
Many languages use a basic dictionary form of the verb. This form is often called the infinitive. In English, infinitives may appear with to, as in to speak, to go, and to learn. They may also appear without to after certain verbs, as in can speak or must go.
Examples:
| Infinitive | Conjugated Forms |
|---|---|
| to speak | speak, speaks, spoke, spoken, speaking |
| to go | go, goes, went, gone, going |
| to be | am, is, are, was, were, been, being |
| to have | have, has, had, having |
The infinitive is not always the same as the stem. The stem is the part of the verb that remains after removing certain endings. For example, in Spanish hablar means “to speak,” and the stem is habl-. Endings are added to this stem to form hablo, hablas, habla, hablamos, and other forms.
Grammatical Categories in Verb Conjugation
Verb conjugation can express several grammatical categories. Not every language marks all of these categories through verb endings. Some languages use auxiliary verbs, particles, word order, or separate words instead.
Person
Person shows who is involved in the action. Most grammatical systems distinguish between first person, second person, and third person.
| Person | Meaning | English Example |
|---|---|---|
| First person | the speaker | I speak, we speak |
| Second person | the listener | you speak |
| Third person | someone or something else | he speaks, they speak |
In English, person is visible in only a few verb forms. For example, the present simple form changes in the third-person singular: I walk, but she walks. In Spanish, person is marked more clearly: hablo means “I speak,” while hablas means “you speak.”
Number
Number shows whether the subject is singular or plural.
Examples in English:
| Singular | Plural |
|---|---|
| he is | they are |
| she writes | they write |
| I was | we were |
In some languages, number distinctions are more detailed. A language may distinguish singular, dual, and plural. Dual number refers specifically to two people or things.
Tense
Tense shows the time of an action, event, or state. The most common tense distinctions are present, past, and future.
Examples in English:
| Tense | Example |
|---|---|
| Present | I work |
| Past | I worked |
| Future | I will work |
In English, tense is often formed with auxiliary verbs. For example, will work uses the auxiliary will to refer to future time. In many other languages, future time may be shown by a verb ending.
Examples from Spanish:
| Spanish | Meaning |
|---|---|
| hablo | I speak |
| hablé | I spoke |
| hablaré | I will speak |
Tense should not be confused with time. Time is a real-world concept, while tense is a grammatical form. A present-tense form can sometimes refer to the future, as in The train leaves tomorrow.
Aspect
Aspect shows how an action is viewed in relation to time. It can show whether an action is completed, ongoing, repeated, habitual, or connected to another time.
Examples in English:
| Aspect | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Simple | I read | general or complete action |
| Progressive | I am reading | ongoing action |
| Perfect | I have read | action connected to a later point |
| Perfect progressive | I have been reading | ongoing action with duration |
Aspect is not always marked by endings. English often uses auxiliary verbs such as be and have. Other languages may use prefixes, suffixes, particles, or different verb stems.
Mood
Mood shows the speaker’s attitude toward the action or event. It can indicate whether something is factual, possible, desired, commanded, conditional, or hypothetical.
Common moods include:
| Mood | Function | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Indicative | states facts or questions | She works here. |
| Imperative | gives commands | Work carefully. |
| Subjunctive | shows wishes, possibilities, or hypothetical situations | I suggest that he be present. |
| Conditional | shows what would happen under certain conditions | I would help. |
English has relatively limited mood marking compared with many languages. The subjunctive, for example, appears in forms such as I suggest that he go rather than he goes. Romance languages such as Spanish and French use the subjunctive more frequently.
Voice
Voice shows the relationship between the subject and the action of the verb.
The two most common voices are active voice and passive voice.
| Voice | Example | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| Active | The teacher explained the rule. | The subject performs the action. |
| Passive | The rule was explained by the teacher. | The subject receives the action. |
In English, passive voice is usually formed with a form of be plus the past participle: is written, was taken, has been seen. In some languages, passive voice may be marked directly on the verb.
Agreement
Agreement is the grammatical relationship between a verb and another part of the sentence, usually the subject. A verb may agree with the subject in person, number, gender, or other features.
Examples:
| Language | Example | Agreement Feature |
|---|---|---|
| English | She walks. | third-person singular |
| Spanish | Nosotros hablamos. | first-person plural |
| French | Ils parlent. | third-person plural |
| Arabic | katabat | feminine singular in some contexts |
English has limited verb agreement. Many other languages require much more detailed agreement. In some languages, the verb may agree not only with the subject, but also with the object.
Regular and Irregular Verbs
A regular verb follows the normal conjugation pattern of a language. An irregular verb does not follow the expected pattern completely.
In English, regular past-tense verbs usually take -ed.
Examples:
| Base Form | Past Simple | Past Participle |
|---|---|---|
| walk | walked | walked |
| play | played | played |
| clean | cleaned | cleaned |
| open | opened | opened |
Irregular verbs form their past forms in different ways.
Examples:
| Base Form | Past Simple | Past Participle |
|---|---|---|
| go | went | gone |
| write | wrote | written |
| see | saw | seen |
| take | took | taken |
| be | was, were | been |
Irregular verbs are often among the most common verbs in a language. Because they are used frequently, older forms may survive even when the general grammar of the language changes.
Conjugation in English
English has a relatively simple conjugation system compared with many other Indo-European languages. Most English verbs have only a small number of forms.
For a regular verb such as work, the main forms are:
| Form | Example |
|---|---|
| Base form | work |
| Third-person singular present | works |
| Past simple | worked |
| Past participle | worked |
| Present participle | working |
English relies heavily on auxiliary verbs to create many tense, aspect, mood, and voice combinations.
Examples:
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| Simple present | I work |
| Present progressive | I am working |
| Present perfect | I have worked |
| Past progressive | I was working |
| Future with auxiliary | I will work |
| Passive voice | The work was finished |
| Conditional | I would work |
The verb be is one of the most irregular verbs in English.
| Subject | Present | Past |
|---|---|---|
| I | am | was |
| you | are | were |
| he, she, it | is | was |
| we | are | were |
| they | are | were |
Conjugation in Spanish
Spanish has a rich conjugation system. Verbs are usually grouped into three main classes according to their infinitive endings: -ar, -er, and -ir.
Example with hablar (“to speak”) in the present tense:
| Person | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| yo | hablo | I speak |
| tú | hablas | you speak |
| él, ella, usted | habla | he, she speaks, you speak formally |
| nosotros | hablamos | we speak |
| vosotros | habláis | you speak |
| ellos, ellas, ustedes | hablan | they speak, you speak |
Spanish verbs also change for tense, mood, and aspect. Since the ending often shows the subject, subject pronouns can sometimes be omitted. For example, hablo already indicates “I speak,” so yo is not always necessary.
Conjugation in French
French verbs also change according to person, number, tense, and mood. However, spoken French often has forms that sound the same even when they are written differently.
Example with parler (“to speak”) in the present tense:
| Person | French | English |
|---|---|---|
| je | parle | I speak |
| tu | parles | you speak |
| il, elle | parle | he, she speaks |
| nous | parlons | we speak |
| vous | parlez | you speak |
| ils, elles | parlent | they speak |
Although parle, parles, and parlent are spelled differently, they are often pronounced the same. This means French conjugation is partly a written distinction and partly a spoken one.
Conjugation in German
German verbs conjugate according to person, number, tense, mood, and sometimes voice. In the present tense, regular verbs often use endings added to a stem.
Example with machen (“to do” or “to make”):
| Person | German | English |
|---|---|---|
| ich | mache | I do |
| du | machst | you do |
| er, sie, es | macht | he, she, it does |
| wir | machen | we do |
| ihr | macht | you do |
| sie, Sie | machen | they do, you do formally |
German also uses auxiliary verbs to form perfect tenses and passive constructions, such as ich habe gemacht (“I have done”) and es wird gemacht (“it is being done”).
Conjugation in Arabic
Arabic conjugation is based on roots and patterns. Many Arabic verbs are built from consonantal roots, usually consisting of three consonants. These roots are placed into patterns that create different meanings and grammatical forms.
For example, the root K-T-B is connected with meanings related to writing.
Examples:
| Arabic Form | General Meaning |
|---|---|
| kataba | he wrote |
| yaktubu | he writes |
| kitaab | book |
| kaatib | writer |
Arabic verbs may show person, number, gender, tense, mood, and voice. Unlike English, Arabic can mark gender directly in many verb forms.
Conjugation in Agglutinative Languages
In agglutinative languages, grammatical information is often added through a series of clear suffixes or prefixes. Each affix may express one grammatical meaning.
Turkish is a common example. A verb may include markers for negation, tense, person, and other categories.
Example:
| Turkish | Approximate Meaning |
|---|---|
| geliyorum | I am coming |
| gelmiyorum | I am not coming |
| geldim | I came |
| geleceğim | I will come |
In such languages, conjugation can create long verb forms, but the structure is often regular and systematic.
Synthetic and Analytic Conjugation
Languages differ in how they express grammatical information.
A synthetic language uses changes inside the word, such as endings or stem changes. An analytic language uses separate words, word order, or particles more often.
Examples:
| Type | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Synthetic | Grammar is marked inside the word | Spanish hablaré means “I will speak” |
| Analytic | Grammar is marked with separate words | English will speak |
| Mixed | Uses both word changes and helper words | English, German, French |
Most languages are not purely one type. English has analytic structures such as will go, but it also has inflectional forms such as goes, went, and written.
Stem Changes
Some verbs change not only by adding endings, but also by changing the stem.
Examples in English:
| Base Form | Past Form |
|---|---|
| sing | sang |
| drink | drank |
| begin | began |
| swim | swam |
Examples in Spanish:
| Infinitive | Present Form | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| pensar | pienso | I think |
| dormir | duermo | I sleep |
| pedir | pido | I ask for |
Stem changes are common in many languages. They may reflect older sound changes, historical patterns, or irregular developments.
Auxiliary Verbs and Compound Forms
Auxiliary verbs, also called helping verbs, are used together with main verbs to express tense, aspect, mood, or voice.
Common English auxiliaries include:
| Auxiliary | Function | Example |
|---|---|---|
| be | progressive aspect, passive voice | She is reading. The book was written. |
| have | perfect aspect | They have arrived. |
| do | questions, negatives, emphasis | Do you agree? I do not know. |
| will | future reference | I will call. |
| would | conditional meaning | She would help. |
| can | ability or possibility | He can swim. |
| must | obligation or strong certainty | You must leave. |
In some grammatical traditions, compound verb phrases are treated as part of conjugation. In others, conjugation is limited to changes in the verb word itself.
Finite and Non-Finite Forms
Verb forms can be finite or non-finite.
A finite verb is marked for tense, person, number, or mood and can function as the main verb of a clause.
Examples:
| Sentence | Finite Verb |
|---|---|
| She works every day. | works |
| They were tired. | were |
| I wrote a letter. | wrote |
A non-finite verb does not show tense or subject agreement in the same way. Infinitives, participles, and gerunds are common non-finite forms.
Examples:
| Non-Finite Form | Example |
|---|---|
| Infinitive | to read |
| Bare infinitive | read in “can read” |
| Present participle | reading |
| Past participle | written |
| Gerund | Reading is useful. |
Non-finite forms are important because they combine with auxiliaries and appear in many sentence structures.
Verb Paradigms
A verb paradigm is a table or organized set of all the forms of a verb. Paradigms are especially useful in languages with many conjugated forms.
Example of a simple English paradigm for to play:
| Category | Form |
|---|---|
| Base form | play |
| Third-person singular | plays |
| Past simple | played |
| Past participle | played |
| Present participle | playing |
Example of a Spanish present-tense paradigm for comer (“to eat”):
| Person | Form |
|---|---|
| yo | como |
| tú | comes |
| él, ella, usted | come |
| nosotros | comemos |
| vosotros | coméis |
| ellos, ellas, ustedes | comen |
Paradigms help learners see patterns and compare regular and irregular verbs.
Conjugation Classes
A conjugation class is a group of verbs that follow the same pattern. Languages with rich verb morphology often classify verbs this way.
Examples:
| Language | Common Conjugation Classes |
|---|---|
| Spanish | -ar, -er, -ir verbs |
| Italian | -are, -ere, -ire verbs |
| French | -er, -ir, -re verbs |
| Latin | first, second, third, fourth conjugations |
| Russian | first and second conjugation groups |
Conjugation classes make it easier to predict verb forms. Once a learner knows the pattern for one regular verb, they can apply it to many others.
Suppletion
Suppletion occurs when a verb uses forms from historically different roots. The English verb go is a common example: its past tense is went, which comes from a different historical verb.
Examples:
| Verb | Suppletive Form |
|---|---|
| go | went |
| be | am, is, are, was, were |
| good | better, best |
The verb be is highly suppletive in many Indo-European languages. Its forms often come from several older roots.
Conjugation and Meaning
Conjugation is not only a mechanical change in form. It affects meaning. Changing the verb form can change the time, subject, certainty, politeness, or relationship between events.
Examples:
| Verb Form | Meaning |
|---|---|
| I work | present habit or general fact |
| I worked | past action |
| I am working | ongoing present action |
| I have worked | past action with present relevance |
| I would work | conditional action |
| Work! | command |
Small changes in verb form can therefore create major changes in meaning.
Common Learning Difficulties
Verb conjugation is one of the most difficult areas for language learners because it combines form, meaning, and sentence structure.
Common difficulties include:
| Difficulty | Example |
|---|---|
| Choosing the correct tense | I have seen vs. I saw |
| Remembering irregular forms | go, went, gone |
| Matching subject and verb | she walks, not she walk |
| Using the correct mood | If I were, not If I was in formal contexts |
| Distinguishing aspect | I read vs. I am reading |
| Learning many endings | Spanish, French, Arabic, Turkish |
| Understanding auxiliary verbs | do, be, have, will |
Learners often find conjugation easier when they study verbs in patterns rather than as isolated forms.
Conjugation in Language Learning
Verb conjugation is usually taught through a combination of rules, examples, drills, and real sentence practice. Memorizing tables can help, but conjugation becomes more useful when learners see how forms work in context.
Effective ways to learn conjugation include:
| Method | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Learning regular patterns first | Builds a foundation |
| Studying high-frequency irregular verbs | Improves everyday communication |
| Practicing full sentences | Connects form with meaning |
| Comparing similar tenses | Reduces confusion |
| Reading and listening often | Builds natural recognition |
| Speaking and writing | Builds active recall |
| Using verb tables | Helps organize forms |
For example, instead of memorizing only go, went, gone, learners can practice full sentences:
| Form | Sentence |
|---|---|
| go | I go to school every day. |
| goes | She goes to school by bus. |
| went | They went home early. |
| gone | He has gone to work. |
| going | We are going now. |
This connects conjugation with actual use.
Conjugation and Translation
Verb conjugation does not always translate directly from one language to another. A tense in one language may correspond to a different tense, aspect, or structure in another language.
For example:
| Language Issue | Example |
|---|---|
| English present perfect vs. simple past | I have eaten vs. I ate |
| Spanish preterite vs. imperfect | hablé vs. hablaba |
| French passé composé vs. imparfait | j’ai parlé vs. je parlais |
| German perfect tense in speech | ich habe gemacht |
| Arabic perfect and imperfect forms | kataba vs. yaktubu |
Because languages divide time and aspect differently, learners should avoid translating verb forms word for word. It is usually better to learn the function of each form in the target language.
Conjugation and Register
Verb forms may also vary by register, politeness, and formality. Some languages have special verb endings or forms for formal speech.
Examples:
| Language | Feature |
|---|---|
| German | distinction between du and Sie |
| Spanish | distinction between tú, usted, vosotros, and ustedes |
| French | distinction between tu and vous |
| Korean | speech levels and honorific verb endings |
| Japanese | polite and plain verb forms |
In these languages, conjugation is not only grammatical. It also reflects social relationships between speakers.
Conjugation and Word Order
In languages with rich conjugation, word order may be more flexible because the verb ending already provides information about the subject or object. In languages with less inflection, word order often carries more grammatical responsibility.
Example:
| Language Type | Feature |
|---|---|
| Rich conjugation | Verb ending may show the subject |
| Limited conjugation | Subject pronoun and word order are more important |
Spanish can omit subject pronouns more often because verb endings usually identify the subject. English usually requires the subject pronoun because many verb forms are identical across persons.
Compare:
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| Hablo español. | I speak Spanish. |
| Hablamos español. | We speak Spanish. |
In English, speak alone does not show whether the subject is I, we, you, or they.
References
- [1] Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries, “conjugate,” defines conjugating as giving the different forms of a verb according to number, person, tense, and related categories.
- [2] Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries, “conjugation,” explains the term as both the way a verb conjugates and a group of verbs that conjugate in the same way.
- [3] Cambridge Dictionary Grammar, “Tenses and time,” describes tenses as different forms of a verb or verb phrase used to talk or write about different times.
- [4] Cambridge Dictionary, “tense,” defines tense as a verb form showing the time at which an action happened.
- [5] Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries, “verb,” defines a verb as a word or group of words expressing an action, event, or state.
- [6] Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries, “infinitive,” defines the infinitive as the basic form of a verb, such as be or run.
- [7] Cambridge Core, “Tense, Aspect, and Auxiliary Verbs: The English Verb System,” discusses tense, aspect, and auxiliary verbs in English verb structure.
- [8] Wikipedia, “Grammatical conjugation,” provides an overview of conjugation as the creation of derived verb forms by inflection and lists grammatical categories that may affect verb forms.

