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Verbs

German verbs are the engine of every sentence. Like English, they change form based on who's doing the action (conjugation) and when it happens (tense). Unlike English, German verb conjugation follows more regular patterns, making it easier to predict once you know the rules. This page covers the essential verb patterns you need for everyday communication.

Verb infinitives

The infinitive is the base form of the verb — what you'll find in dictionaries. In English, infinitives use "to" (to speak, to eat). German infinitives typically end in "-en", occasionally just "-n". When you learn a new verb, you learn its infinitive form first:

German infinitives (the "to" form) typically end in -en:

  • machen — to make/do
  • spielen — to play
  • kommen — to come
  • gehen — to go

A few end in -n:

  • sein — to be
  • tun — to do

Present tense conjugation

To conjugate a regular verb in the present tense, remove the "-en" ending to get the stem, then add the appropriate ending for each person. The endings are highly predictable: -e, -st, -t, -en, -t, -en. Once you know these six endings, you can conjugate thousands of regular verbs:

Regular pattern: machen (to make/do)

Here's the complete conjugation pattern. "Machen" (to make/do) is a common regular verb that demonstrates the standard endings clearly:

PersonPronounStem + EndingMeaning
1st singularichmacheI make
2nd singulardumachstyou make (informal)
3rd singularer/sie/esmachthe/she/it makes
1st pluralwirmachenwe make
2nd pluralihrmachtyou make (informal plural)
3rd pluralsiemachenthey make
FormalSiemachenyou make (formal)

Stem-ending adjustments

Some verb stems end in consonants that make the standard endings hard to pronounce. When the stem ends in "-t", "-d", or certain consonant clusters, German adds an extra "-e-" before the "-st" and "-t" endings. This is purely for ease of pronunciation — "arbeitst" would be awkward, so it becomes "arbeitest":

arbeiten (to work):

  • ich arbeite
  • du arbeitest
  • er arbeitet
  • ihr arbeitet

If the stem ends in -s, , -z, or -x, the du form only adds -t:

reisen (to travel):

  • du reist (not reisst)

Important irregular verbs

Every language has irregular verbs, and the most common verbs are usually the most irregular. German is no exception. "Sein" (to be) and "haben" (to have) are used in virtually every conversation and as auxiliaries for forming past tenses. Memorise their forms completely — you'll use them constantly.

sein (to be)

"Sein" is completely irregular — none of its forms resemble the infinitive. This is true in most European languages (English: am/is/are/was/were). Learn these forms by heart:

PersonFormExample
ichbinIch bin müde. (I am tired.)
dubistDu bist nett. (You are nice.)
er/sie/esistEs ist kalt. (It is cold.)
wirsindWir sind hier. (We are here.)
ihrseidIhr seid spät. (You are late.)
sie/SiesindSie sind willkommen. (You are welcome.)

haben (to have)

"Haben" is less irregular than "sein" but still has some quirks. The "du" and "er/sie/es" forms drop the "b" ("hast", "hat"). "Haben" is essential as it's used to form the past tense (Perfekt) for most verbs:

PersonFormExample
ichhabeIch habe Zeit. (I have time.)
duhastDu hast Recht. (You are right.)
er/sie/eshatSie hat Hunger. (She is hungry.)
wirhabenWir haben ein Auto. (We have a car.)
ihrhabtIhr habt Glück. (You are lucky.)
sie/SiehabenSie haben Post. (You have mail.)

werden (to become / auxiliary for future)

"Werden" means "to become" but is also used as the auxiliary verb for forming the future tense. Like English "will", it combines with an infinitive to express future actions. It's also used for the passive voice. A versatile and essential verb:

PersonForm
ichwerde
duwirst
er/sie/eswird
wirwerden
ihrwerdet
sie/Siewerden

Stem-changing verbs

Many of the most common German verbs are "stem-changing" — they modify their vowel in the "du" and "er/sie/es" forms only. This happens in the present tense and affects speaking, giving, eating, seeing, and many other everyday verbs. The changes follow predictable patterns (e→i, e→ie, a→a), so once you recognise the pattern, you can predict the changes.

e → i

Some verbs with "e" in the stem change it to "i" in the second and third person singular. This is common in verbs of speaking, giving, and taking:

Infinitiveduer/sie/esMeaning
sprechensprichstsprichtto speak
gebengibstgibtto give
essenisstisstto eat
nehmennimmstnimmtto take
helfenhilfsthilftto help

e → ie

Other verbs with "e" change it to "ie" (a longer sound). This typically happens in verbs of seeing and reading. The "ie" represents a longer vowel sound than the simple "i":

Infinitiveduer/sie/esMeaning
sehensiehstsiehtto see
lesenliestliestto read
empfehlenempfiehlstempfiehltto recommend

a → ä

Verbs with "a" in the stem often add an umlaut, becoming "a". This happens in common verbs of motion and action like driving, sleeping, and running. The umlaut shifts the vowel sound forward in your mouth:

Infinitiveduer/sie/esMeaning
fahrenfährstfährtto drive/travel
schlafenschläfstschläftto sleep
tragenträgstträgtto wear/carry
laufenläufstläuftto run/walk

Modal verbs express ability (can), necessity (must), desire (want), permission (may), and obligation (should). German has six modal verbs, all of which are irregular. They work with another verb in the infinitive, which goes to the end of the sentence. Mastering modals dramatically expands what you can express — "I can speak German", "I must go now", "I want to read":

InfinitiveMeaningichduer/sie/eswirihrsie/Sie
könnencan, able tokannkannstkannkönnenkönntkönnen
müssenmust, have tomussmusstmussmüssenmüsstmüssen
wollenwant towillwillstwillwollenwolltwollen
sollenshouldsollsollstsollsollensolltsollen
dürfenmay, allowed todarfdarfstdarfdürfendürftdürfen
mögenlike tomagmagstmagmögenmögtmögen

Sentence structure with modals:

  • Ich kann Deutsch sprechen. — I can speak German.
  • Du musst jetzt gehen. — You must go now.
  • Sie will ein Buch lesen. — She wants to read a book.

Past tense: Perfekt

For everyday spoken German, the Perfekt is the go-to past tense. It's similar to English "I have done" but is used where English would use simple past ("I did"). The Perfekt uses an auxiliary verb ("haben" or "sein") plus a past participle. Learning to form past participles is essential for talking about anything that happened in the past.

Regular (weak) verbs

Regular verbs form their past participle predictably: add "ge-" to the beginning and "-t" to the end of the stem. "Machen" (to make) becomes "gemacht" (made). This pattern covers thousands of verbs:

Past participle = ge- + stem + -t

InfinitivePast participleExample
machengemachtIch habe es gemacht. (I did it.)
spielengespieltWir haben gespielt. (We played.)
kaufengekauftSie hat es gekauft. (She bought it.)

Irregular (strong) verbs

Irregular (strong) verbs form past participles differently: they often have vowel changes in the stem and end in "-en" instead of "-t". "Sehen" (to see) becomes "gesehen" (seen), "sprechen" (to speak) becomes "gesprochen" (spoken). These must be memorised, but many follow patterns you'll recognise:

InfinitivePast participleExample
sehengesehenIch habe ihn gesehen. (I saw him.)
gebengegebenEr hat mir Geld gegeben. (He gave me money.)
sprechengesprochenWir haben Deutsch gesprochen. (We spoke German.)
fahrengefahrenSie ist nach Berlin gefahren. (She went to Berlin.)

Verbs with sein

Most verbs form the Perfekt with "haben", but verbs of movement or change of state use "sein" instead. Think: "I have arrived" doesn't work in German — it's "Ich bin angekommen" (I am arrived). If the verb involves going somewhere or becoming something different, use "sein":

VerbPast participleExample
gehengegangenIch bin gegangen. (I went.)
kommengekommenEr ist gekommen. (He came.)
werdengewordenSie ist müde geworden. (She became tired.)
seingewesenWir sind dort gewesen. (We were there.)

Past tense: Präteritum

The Prateritum (simple past) is used primarily in written German — novels, newspapers, formal reports. In speech, you'll mainly encounter it with "sein", "haben", and modal verbs, where it sounds more natural than Perfekt. "Ich war mude" (I was tired) is more common in speech than "Ich bin mude gewesen".

sein (was/were)

The Prateritum of "sein" is used constantly in both speech and writing. These forms are essential:

PersonForm
ichwar
duwarst
er/sie/eswar
wirwaren
ihrwart
sie/Siewaren

haben (had)

The Prateritum of "haben" is also common in speech, especially in northern Germany. These forms are straightforward — add endings to the stem "hatt-":

PersonForm
ichhatte
duhattest
er/sie/eshatte
wirhatten
ihrhattet
sie/Siehatten

Future tense

German forms the future tense using "werden" (the verb you learned means "to become") plus an infinitive at the end of the sentence. This is similar to English "will" + verb. However, German often uses the present tense with a time expression to indicate future actions, especially for definite plans:

  • Ich werde morgen kommen. — I will come tomorrow.
  • Es wird regnen. — It will rain.
  • Wir werden sehen. — We will see.

Often, present tense with a time expression implies future:

  • Ich komme morgen. — I'm coming tomorrow.

Separable verbs

A distinctive feature of German is separable verbs — verbs with prefixes that detach and move to the end of the sentence. "Aufstehen" (to get up) splits into "Ich stehe... auf" (I get... up). The prefix carries meaning (auf = up, an = at/on, ein = in, mit = with) and must go to the end in main clauses. This takes practice but becomes natural:

VerbMeaningExample
aufstehento get upIch stehe um 7 Uhr auf.
ankommento arriveDer Zug kommt um 8 an.
einkaufento shopSie kauft im Supermarkt ein.
fernsehento watch TVWir sehen abends fern.
mitkommento come alongKommst du mit?

In the past participle, ge- goes between the prefix and stem:

  • aufstehenaufgestanden
  • einkaufeneingekauft

Common verbs reference

Here are the most frequently used German verbs with their Perfekt forms. Memorise these — they appear in virtually every conversation. Note which ones use "sein" (indicated by "ist") versus "haben" (indicated by "hat"):

GermanEnglishPerfekt
gehento goist gegangen
kommento comeist gekommen
sehento seehat gesehen
machento make/dohat gemacht
sagento sayhat gesagt
wissento know (fact)hat gewusst
kennento know (person/place)hat gekannt
denkento thinkhat gedacht
glaubento believehat geglaubt
findento findhat gefunden

Next: Sentence structure →

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