Jump to content

Grammatical conjugation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Pyro~enwiki (talk | contribs) at 04:23, 29 May 2004 (added latin pronouns. used parenthese as the pronouns are often omitted). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In linguistics, grammatical conjugation is the creation of derived forms of a verb from the word root by inflection (regular alteration according to rules of grammar). Conjugation may be affected by person, number, gender, tense, mood, voice, grammatical aspect, or other language-specific factors. When a verb is used to function as the action done by a subject, the verb must be conjugated in most languages. Usually an mostly unconjugated form also exists, called the infinitive. A table giving all the conjugated variants of a verb in a grammar of some language is called a conjugation table.

A second use of the term is the grouping of all the verbs that are conjugated similarly in a particular language into conjugations. This is the sense in which teachers say that Latin has four conjugations of verbs. This catagorisation tells us that we can conjugate any regular Latin verb to any person, number, tense, mood, and voice if we know which conjugation group it belongs to and some key forms called principal parts. (Latin does not conjugate for gender or aspect.)

Examples of conjugation

Conjugation is very extensive in most Indo-European languages. Here is a sample conjugation of the English verb to be and its Latin, French, German, Spanish, and Swedish equivalents—esse, être, sein, ser, and vara, respectively. Notice the similarities between English, German, and Swedish on the one hand and French, Spanish and Latin on the other; notice also that, where the infinitive is concerned, only English and Swedish are very much divergent from the rest of the major European languages, all of which lends important clues as to the philology of English.

To be in several Indo-European languages. Except for the infinitive, which is in the present active form, all the verbs listed are in the present indicative active. The appropriate pronoun is included in most of the examples.
Form / Person English Latin French German Spanish Swedish
infinitive to be esse être sein ser vara
1st singular I am (ego) sum je suis ich bin yo soy jag är
2nd singular you are (tu) es tu es du bist tu eres du är
3rd singular he, she, or it is (is/ea/id) est il / elle est er / sie ist el / ella / usted es han / hon / den är
1st plural we are (nos) sumus nous sommes wir sind nosotros(as) somos vi är
2nd plural you are (vos) estis vous êtes ihr seid vosotros(as) seís ni är
3rd plural they are (ei/eae/ea) sunt ils / elles sont sie sind ellos(as) / ustedes son de är

The grammatical conjugation of an irregular verb forms a model for a genre of joke called the self-serving conjugation. This satirizes the fashion in which violations of the Categorical Imperative may be cloaked in verbal obfuscation. For example: I delegate effectively, you play politics, he is in violation of his service-level agreement.