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Simple Verb Tenses Form Interlingue English Notes Infinitive ar / er / ir amar / decider / scrir to love / to decide / to write Present a / e / i yo ama / decide / scri I love / decide / write Past -t yo amat / decided / scrit I loved / decided / wrote stress thus falls on the last syllable: yo amat: Future va + inf. yo va amar / decider / scrir
Present participles are the same as present tense forms, as the Modern Hebrew present tense comes from a present participle form. Not all past participles shown here correspond to an existent adjective or one congruent to the verb's meaning; the ones shown here are just examples. Past participles are formed according to the tables shown below.
Simple Verb Tenses Form Interlingue English Notes Infinitive ar / er / ir amar / decider / scrir to love / to decide / to write Present a / e / i yo ama / decide / scri I love / decide / write Past -t yo amat / decidet / scrit I loved / decided / wrote stress thus falls on the last syllable: yo amat: Future va + inf. yo va amar / decider / scrir
The progressive aspects (also called "continuous tenses") are formed by using the appropriate tense of estar + present participle (gerundio), and the perfect constructions are formed by using the appropriate tense of haber + past participle (participio). When the past participle is used in this way, it invariably ends with -o.
Examples are shown for the verb amar to love in the active voice; the endings do not change for person or number, except in the imperative. Infinitive: amar to love Present: mi am I love Imperfect: mi amav I loved, I was loving Future: mi amero I shall love Present perfect: mi av amed I have loved Pluperfect: mi avav amed I had loved
In spite of the remarkable continuity of form, several Latin tenses have changed meaning, especially subjunctives. The gerund in Sardinian changed the final -o in -e (like the Proto-Romance present participle accusative form, estinguished, in Sardinian).
The present tense (abbreviated PRES or PRS) is a grammatical tense whose principal function is to locate a situation or event in the present time. [1]
In Hebrew grammar, the qal (קַל "light; easy, simple") is the simple paradigm and simplest stem formation of the verb. [1] Qal is the conjugation or binyan in which most verbs in Hebrew dictionaries appear. [2]