Verbos En Italiano Conjugaciones [updated] < PREMIUM >
| Subject | Simple (-ire) Dormire | "ISC" (-ire) Capire | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Io | Dorm | Cap isc o | | Tu | Dorm i | Cap isc i | | Lui/Lei | Dorm e | Cap isc e | | Noi | Dorm iamo | Cap iamo | | Voi | Dorm ite | Cap ite | | Loro | Dorm ono | Cap isc ono | Common ISC verbs : preferire (to prefer), finire (to finish), pulire (to clean), agire (to act). The Essential Auxiliaries: Essere (to be) and Avere (to have) These two irregular verbs are the backbone of Italian. They are used as helpers for compound tenses (like the past perfect) and are essential on their own.
: Io parlo italiano. Il mio amico preferisce dormire . Ieri siamo andati a Roma. Notice how parlo already means "I speak," how preferisce contains the -isc-, and how siamo andati uses essere with agreement for a masculine plural subject ("we"). verbos en italiano conjugaciones
To speak Italian well, you don’t just memorize words—you transform them. Italian verbs are divided into three regular conjugation groups, based on their infinitive ending (the “to” form: to speak, to receive, to sleep ). | Subject | Simple (-ire) Dormire | "ISC"
In Italian, the verb is the engine of the sentence. Unlike English, which often relies on subject pronouns (I, you, we) and auxiliary verbs (will, have, do), Italian encodes who is acting and when the action happens directly into the verb’s ending. This process is called conjugation ( coniugazione ). : Io parlo italiano
| Group | Infinitive Ending | Example | Meaning | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | -ARE | Parlare | to speak | | 2nd Conjugation | -ERE | Ricevere | to receive | | 3rd Conjugation | -IRE | Dormire | to sleep |
