XxJimmyxX
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| Joined: 15 Feb 2009 |
| Total Posts: 7380 |
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| 12 Nov 2012 02:52 PM |
Conjugate in the past, present and future tense.
English: to go
I was going you were going he/she was going we were going you were going they were going
I go you go he/she goes we go you go they go
I will go you will go he/she will go we will go you will go they will go
Français: aller
j'allais tu allais il/elleallait nous allions vous alliez ils/elles allaient
je vais tu vas il/elle va nous allons vous allez ils/elles vont
j'irai tu iras il/elle ira nous irons vous irez ils/elles iront
Italiano: andare
io andavo tu andavi lui andava noi andavamo voi andavate loro/essi andavano
io vado tu vai lui/lei va noi andiamo voi andate loro/essi vanno
io andrò tu andrai lui andrà noi andremo voi andrete loro/essi andranno |
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| 12 Nov 2012 03:58 PM |
This is an irregular verb in Russian and there's no other verb quite like it. Even the infinitive form is totally different from other verbs.
Russian: идти
Past tense: шёл (shol) - masculine шла (shla) - feminine шло (shlo) - genderless шли (shli) - plural
Present tense: я иду (ya idu) ты идёшь (ty idosh) он/она/oно идёт (on/ona/ono idot) мы идём (my idom) Вы идёте (Vy idote) они идут (oni idut)
Future tense: я буду идти (ya budu idti) ты будешь идти (ty budesh idti) он/она/оно будет идти (on/ona/ono budet idti) мы будем идти (my budem idti) Вы будете идти (Vy budete idti) они будут идти (oni budut idti)
Imperative: иди (idi) - informal and singular идите (idite) - formal and plural |
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| 12 Nov 2012 04:16 PM |
I should explain past tense. In past tense Russian, the noun has a gender, and the verb is conjugated to that gender. For pronouns, я (I) can be masculine or feminine, depending on the gender of the person talking. A guy says я шёл and a girl says я шла. It's the same with every other pronoun besides оно (it) and plural pronouns. You should say оно шло. With plural pronouns: мы, Вы, они (we, you, they), you should use шли. Even if Вы, the formal you, is meant at one person, still use шли. Basically you just conjugate it with the gender of the noun or pronoun.
I should also say that lifeless nouns have gender too. There are a few that don't. That's the only time you say оно to represent "it."
я шёл/шла ты шёл/шла он шёл она шла оно шло мы шли Вы шли они шли
Examples of nouns: кошка шла (koshka shla) - feminine noun кот шёл (kot shol) - masculine noun окно шло (okno shlo) - neuter noun кошки шли (koshki shli) - plural noun |
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| 12 Nov 2012 07:26 PM |
German:
Ich gehe Du gehst Er/sie/es geht Wir gehen Ihr geht sie/Sie gehen
Spanish:
Yo voy Tú vas él/ella/Ud. va Nosotros vamos Vosotros vais Ellos van
Norwegian:
går for all forms |
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| 12 Nov 2012 07:35 PM |
| kingkiller what about past tense and future tense? |
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| 12 Nov 2012 10:33 PM |
German:
For past, just conjugate the verb "haben" and add "gegangen" at the end of the clause.
For future, do the same, but with the verb "werden" and "gehen"
Spanish:
Preterite (Past)-
Yo fui T⌂ fuiste él/ella/Ud. fue Nosotros fuimos Vosotros fuisteis Ellos/Ellas/Uds. fueron
Imperfect (Past)-
Yo iba Tú ibas él/ella/Ud. iba Nosotros ibamos Vosotros ibais Ellos/Ellas/Uds. iban
Future:
Yo iré Tú irás él/ella/Ud. irá Nosotros iremos Vosotros iréis Ellos/ellas/Uds. irán
Norwegian:
Past: gikk for all forms
Future: vil gå for all forms |
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| 12 Nov 2012 10:37 PM |
@Jimmy
By the way, your past for English is technically incorrect. It should be "I went, you went, etc". "I was going" and "I went" have slightly different meanings. |
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TheMyrco
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| Joined: 13 Aug 2011 |
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| 13 Nov 2012 08:29 AM |
O3O type work In Dutch there are like 8 forms for the past and future, I'll just go with what you posted:
Dutch:
Ik ga - I am going/I go Jij gaat/ga <-- ga if jij is after the verb, else gaat. U gaat <-- formal you (singular) Hij/zij/het gaat
Wij gaan Jullie gaan Zij gaan
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Ik ging - I went/I was going Jij ging U ging Hij/zij/het ging
Wij gingen Jullie gingen Zij gingen
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Ik zal gaan - I will go Jij zult/zal gaan <-- if jij after verb; zal, else zult U zult gaan Hij/zij/het zal gaan
Wij zullen gaan Jullie zullen gaan Zij zullen gaan
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XxJimmyxX
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| Joined: 15 Feb 2009 |
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| 13 Nov 2012 02:45 PM |
@kingkiller1000 I used was/were because I conjugated it in the imperfect tense. Sorry! |
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| 13 Nov 2012 04:45 PM |
| at gå - I don't think Danish has any tenses. |
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| 13 Nov 2012 07:20 PM |
> I don't think Danish has any tenses.
It does... |
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| 13 Nov 2012 08:18 PM |
No one thought of this yet:
0111010001101111001000000110011101101111
Binary? |
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| 13 Nov 2012 08:21 PM |
http://www.roblox.com/Forum/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=80625492
#4 |
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StanAdam
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| Joined: 20 Nov 2011 |
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| 14 Nov 2012 02:15 PM |
Japanese:
行きます - To go.
行きます - He is going.
行きました - She was going.
行きます - They happen to be going.
So basically, 行きます means all of them but 行きました is past tense.
~・・・It's not spamming - it's finger exercising・・・~ |
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zars15
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| Joined: 10 Nov 2008 |
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| 14 Nov 2012 03:31 PM |
I - Eju You - Eji He - Iet She - Iet It - Iet You - Ejat We - Ejam They - Iet |
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TheMyrco
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zars15
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| Joined: 10 Nov 2008 |
| Total Posts: 9999 |
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| 14 Nov 2012 03:49 PM |
Past:
I - Gāju You - Gāji He - Gāja She - Gāja It - Gāja You - Gājāt We - Gājām They - Gāja
Future:
I - Iešu You - Iesi He - Ies She - Ies It - Ies You - Iesiet We - Iesim They - Ies |
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| 14 Nov 2012 05:31 PM |
I almost forgot one of my favorite languages:
Esperanto-
Past: iris (for all subjects) Present: iras (for all subjects) Future: iros (for all subjects) Conditional: irus (for all subjects) Imperative: iru (for all subjects) |
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XxJimmyxX
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| Joined: 15 Feb 2009 |
| Total Posts: 7380 |
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| 14 Nov 2012 06:05 PM |
@above They look slightly similar to the future and the conditional tenses in French. |
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| 14 Nov 2012 06:24 PM |
Here's how it works in Esperanto.
Take the stem. In this case: ir- Add a suffix based on the part of speech.
Infinitive: -i (iri) to go Past tense: -is (iris) I went Present tense: -as (iras) I go Future tense: -os (iros) I will go Conditional tense: -us (irus) I should go Imperative tense: -u (iru) Go! Noun: -o (iro) Voyage? Adjective: -a (ira) ???
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Linkmon99
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| Joined: 11 Feb 2009 |
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boilpoil
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| Joined: 07 Apr 2010 |
| Total Posts: 246 |
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| 15 Nov 2012 06:33 AM |
So unfortunate for Chinese, no verb changing at all, so boring lol...
Chinese: 去
我剛去過 --- Well this form is acceptable for past, even if it has no timing indications. 你剛去過 他/她剛去過 我們剛去過 你們剛去過 他們剛去過
我去 你去 他/她去 我們去 你們去 他們去
--- Not a frequent usage at all... in Chinese there is mostly timing indications or adverbs of frequency in which we would use this form, for example "我常去... (I often go (to)..."
我會去 --- I think in most cases adding '會 (will)' generally indicates future tense. 你會去 他/她會去 我們會去 你們會去 他們會去 |
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