Slovene verbs
This article describes the conjugation and use of verbs in Slovene. Further information about the grammar of the Slovene language can be found in the article Slovene grammar.
Grammatical categories
In Slovene, there are four tenses:- The present tense, which considers events that are occurring.
- The past or preterite tense, which considers events that occurred in the past.
- The pluperfect tense, which considers events that occurred before a given event already in the past. It is rare in normal use.
- The future tense, which considers events that will occur.
- Indicative mood, which is used to state a fact or opinion.
- Imperative mood, which is used to give commands.
- Conditional mood, which is used to state possibilities or wishes, for example, If only I knew that....
- An infinitive in -ti and a supine in -t.
- Two present active participles, in -č and in -e, indicating ongoing action.
- Two past active participles, in -l and in -ši, indicating a past or completed action.
- A past passive participle in -n or -t, indicating an action having been performed on something.
As in all Slavic languages, Slovene verbs are classified based on their aspect:
- Perfective verbs, which represent a completed action.
- Imperfective verbs, which represent an ongoing action.
As well, verbs can be classified based on their transitivity and aspect. Many verbs in Slovene can be both transitive and intransitive depending on their use in a sentence. However, all reflexive verbs, which are marked by the participle se, are intransitive.
Conjugation
All conjugated forms of Slovene verbs can be derived from one of two verb stems. The present stem forms the base for all forms of the present indicative and the imperative, as well as the present participles. The infinitive stem forms the infinitive, supine and past participles.The Slovene verb can be classified into several different conjugation patterns. The following table lists the basic patterns, but note that individual verbs may be irregular and have unpredictable changes. The "present" column shows the ending of the first person singular present indicative. Letters that belong to the present or infinitive stem are shown in bold.
Present | Infinitive | Examples | Notes |
-em | -ti, -či -ati | "carry", "say" "read", "grind" | Basic stems ending in a consonant. There are many irregularities in this group. The final consonant may be altered by some endings, in particular the infinitive, or it may switch places with the preceding vowel. |
-jem | -ti -jati | "beat", "hear" "give" | Basic stems ending in a vowel or certain consonants. |
-jem | -ati | "draw", "take" | An extra -j- appears in the present tense, which can affect the final consonant of the stem. |
-ujem | -ovati -evati | "buy" "pay" | The verbs ending in -evati always have stems ending in -č-, -š-, -ž- or -j-. |
-am | -ati | "do, make" | These verbs originally had longer stems, in -aje-, in which the -j- was lost and the vowels contracted. The -j- remains in the imperative and present participles. |
-em | -eti | "understand" | |
-im | -iti -eti -ati | "think" "see" "hear" | The verbs ending in -ati always have stems ending in -č-, -š-, -ž- or -j-. |
-nem | -niti | "lift, raise" |
Present indicative
These following endings are added to the present stem of a verb, to form the present indicative.Singular | Dual | Plural | |
First person | -m | -va | -mo |
Second person | -š | -ta | -te |
Third person | - | -ta | -jo |
The extra -e- is added to the endings when the verb stem ends in a consonant. This -e- causes changes to stems ending in -k- or -g- ; these become -č- and -ž- before the present tense endings.
In some consonant stem verbs, an older, shorter form of the third person plural ending exists, which is just -o instead of -ejo. Similarly, in verbs with present stems in -i-, the ending -ijo has a shorter alternative form -e.
Imperative mood
The imperative mood is used to give commands, and only exists in the present tense. There are no forms for the first person singular or the third person of any number.The following endings are added to the present stem of a verb, to form the present indicative.
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
First person | -iva | -imo | |
Second person | -i | -ita | -ite |
If the present stem ends in -a-, the initial -i- of the ending changes to a -j-. Present stems ending with other vowels drop their final vowel. The endings also cause changes to stems ending in -k- or -g- ; these become -c- and -z- respectively before the imperative endings.
An additional kind of imperative, which may be called the optative or hortative, is formed by using the particle naj with the present indicative. This acts as a substitute for the imperative in the third person as well.
Non-finite forms
Infinitive and supine
There are 2 verbal nouns: the infinitive and the supine.The infinitive is the basic verb form found in dictionaries, and ends in -ti. When the infinitive ending is attached to a stem ending in a consonant, that consonant may change, as follows:
- -p-ti → -psti
- -b-ti → -bsti
- -d-ti → -sti
- -t-ti → -sti
- -st-ti → -sti
- -z-ti → -sti
- -g-ti → -či
- -k-ti → -či
- V novi svet so odšli iskat bogastvo.
- Pojdi se solit.
- Stekli smo pogasit ogenj.
Present active participle
The first is an adjectival participle. It is formed by adding -eč to verbs with present stem in -i- or -e-, -joč to verbs with present stem in -a-, and -oč to all other verbs. It declines as a regular soft adjective.
Examples:
- Otrok, ki joka, je jokajoč otrok.
- V sobo je vstopil glasno pojoč.
- Sede se je pretegnil.
Past active participle
The l-participle exists for all verbs, and is used mainly to form the past tense. Although it is adjectival, it exists only in the nominative case, and declines for gender and number. It is formed by adding -l to the infinitive stem. A fill vowel is inserted in the masculine singular form when attached to verbs with an infinitive stem ending in a consonant.
Examples:
- Videl sem.
- Ob tej novici je prebledela.
Examples:
- Stopivši iz hiše, se je napotil v krčmo.
Past passive participle
-n is added to verbs with an infinitive stem in -a-. Verbs with an infinitive stem in -i- receive -jen, but the -j- may disappear and alter the preceding consonant. All other verbs have -en. However, a small number of verbs, mostly those with presents in a vowel followed by -je-, have a completely different ending -t.
Examples of this participle are:
- Parkiran avto je bil ukraden.
- Sodišče je sodilo obtoženemu roparju.
- Spočit konj je čakal na dvorišču.
Analytical forms
Past indicative
The past indicative is used to indicate events that occurred in the past. Modern Slovene does not distinguish the past tense from the perfect tense ; this distinction was common in Middle Slovene when aorist served the past tense form.It is formed with the auxiliary verb biti in the present tense, plus the l-participle of the verb. The participle must agree with the subject in number and gender. For example:
- sem videl
- sem videla
- je odšla
- so odkrili
Pluperfect indicative
It is formed as though it were the past tense of the past tense: the auxiliary verb biti in the present tense, plus the l-participle of the verb biti, plus the l-participle of the verb. The participles must agree with the subject in number and gender. For example:
- sem bil videl
- sem bila videla
- je bila odšla
- so bili odkrili
Future indicative
The verb biti has its own unique set of future tense forms, with the stem bo-. No other verb has a distinct form for the future tense. Instead, it is formed using biti in the future tense, plus the l-participle of the verb. The participle must agree with the subject in number and gender. For example:
- videl bom
- videla bom
- odšla bo
- bodo odkrili
Conditional mood
The present conditional is formed using the special particle bi, plus the l'-participle of the lexical verb. The past conditional is rarely used, like the pluperfect, and is formed analogously: the particle bi, plus l-participle of the verb biti, plus the l-participle of the verb. Examples of the conditional mood are:
- Če bi mi postalo slabo, mi, prosim, podajte tiste tablete.
- V primeru, da bi prišlo do požara, bomo umrli.
- Če bi končali prej, bi bili zdaj prosti.
- Želi si, da bi bil maneken, vendar s svojimi obraznimi nečistočami nima možnosti.
- O, da bi bila jesen!
- O, ko bi le bila jesen!
Passive voice
- Izvoljen je bil za člana Kraljeve družbe.
- Izvolili so ga za člana Kraljeve družbe.
Sample conjugations of Slovene verbs
- The participle agrees with the subject of the sentence.
- The participle agrees with the subject of the sentence.
- The participle agrees with the subject of the sentence.
- The participle agrees with the subject of the sentence.
- The participle agrees with the subject of the sentence.
- The participle agrees with the subject of the sentence.
- The participle agrees with the subject of the sentence.