Grammatical forms of verbs in the Portuguese language
Portuguese verbs display a high degree of inflection. A typical regular verb has over fifty different forms, expressing up to six different grammatical tenses and three moods. Two forms are peculiar to Portuguese within the Romance languages:
It has also several verbal periphrases.
Overview
Portuguese verbs have the following properties.
- Two numbers—singular, plural
- Three persons—first, second, third
- Three aspects—perfective, imperfective, progressive*
- Two voices—active, passive*
- Six morphological forms for tenses, aspects, and/or moods—present, preterite, imperfect, pluperfect, future, and conditional.
- Three (or four) moods—indicative, subjunctive, imperative (and conditional, according to some authors)
Classes with an asterisk are entirely periphrastic. The passive voice can be constructed in two different ways. The pluperfect and the future of the indicative mood, as well as the conditional form, are often replaced with other verbal constructions or verbal periphrases in the spoken language.
Basic tenses and moods
Conjugation is demonstrated here with the important irregular verb fazer, "to do":
Periphrastic forms are as follows:
Notes
- ^ The Portuguese conditional is sometimes replaced with a periphrasis or with the imperfect indicative in the spoken language. Some authors regard it as a mood of its own, others treat it as a tense of the indicative mood.
- ^ The pluperfect indicative can also be expressed with an equivalent periphrasis.
- ^ The future indicative is usually replaced with a periphrasis or the present indicative in the spoken language.
- ^ a b In regular verbs, the future subjunctive and the personal infinitive are identical.
- ^ See the section on the imperative, below.
- ^ Not in common use today except for some adjectives or nouns that are typically replaced by the corresponding agent nouns ("-dor(a)", "-ista", etc.) or the standard gerund. See below.
Description
The tenses correspond to:
- Present (presente): "I do" or "I am doing".
- Preterite (pretérito, or pretérito perfeito): "I did" or "I have done".
- Imperfect (imperfeito, or pretérito imperfeito): "I did", "I used to do", "I was doing".
- Pluperfect (mais-que-perfeito, or pretérito mais-que-perfeito): "I had done".
- Future (futuro, or futuro do presente in Brazilian Portuguese): "I will do", "I am going to do".
- Conditional (condicional, or futuro do pretérito in Brazilian Portuguese): "I would do". Used in some types of conditional sentences, as a form of courtesy, or as a future-in-the-past.
The five non-finite forms generally correspond to:
- (Impersonal) infinitive (infinitivo, or infinitivo impessoal): equivalent to English "to do".
- Past participle (particípio, or particípio passado): equivalent to English "done".
- Present participle (particípio presente): Uncommon in modern speech. Somewhat equivalent to English "doer", or used as an adjective relating to an ongoing action, or that action in general. For example, "falante" can mean "talking (+ noun)", "talkative" or "speaker". See notes above.
- Gerund (gerúndio): equivalent to English "(is) doing". Used to actually show/describe ongoing action.
- Personal infinitive (infinitivo pessoal): "(for me) to do", an infinitive which inflects according to its subject; a rare feature that Portuguese shares with Galician.
The moods are used roughly as follows:
- Indicative (indicativo): for factual statements or positive beliefs. Example of an English equivalent: "I have done".
- Subjunctive (subjuntivo, or conjuntivo): mostly used when speaking of unreal, uncertain, or unassumed conditions: "Were I to do".
- Imperative (imperativo): for direct commands or requests; equivalent to the English "Do!"
For the Portuguese personal pronouns (which are omitted whenever they can be inferred from the ending of the conjugated verb or the context), see Portuguese personal pronouns and possessives.
Conjugations
Regular verbs belong to one of three conjugation classes, distinguished by the ending of their infinitive forms (which is also their citation form):
- Those whose infinitive ends in -ar belong to the first conjugation (e.g. lavar, matar, ladrar);
- Those whose infinitive ends in -er belong to the second conjugation (e.g. correr, comer, colher);
- Those whose infinitive ends in -ir belong to the third conjugation (e.g. partir, destruir, urdir);
The verb pôr is conventionally placed in the second conjugation by many authors, since it is derived from Old Portuguese poer (Latin ponere). In any event, this is an irregular verb whose conjugation must be learned on its own. Other verbs with infinitives ending in -or, such as depor, compor, and propor are derivatives of pôr, and are conjugated in the same way.
First conjugation (cantar)
Second conjugation (comer)
Third conjugation (partir)
Quick reference
Important irregular verbs
The following irregular verbs are used as auxiliary verbs in various periphrastic constructions.
ter – to have
estar – to be
ser – to be
haver – to have, to happen, there to be
pôr - to put
Conditional and future
There are few irregular verbs for these tenses (only dizer, fazer, trazer, and their compounds – also haver, ter, ser, ir, pôr, estar, etc. – for the subjunctive future imperfect). The indicative future imperfect, conditional, and subjunctive future imperfect are formed by adding to the infinitive of the verb the indicative present inflections of the auxiliary verb haver (dropping the h and av), the 2nd/3rd conjugation endings of the preterite, imperfect, and the personal infinitive endings, respectively. Thus, for the majority of verbs, the simple personal infinitive coincides with subjunctive future.
Imperative
The affirmative imperative for second person pronouns tu and vós is obtained from the present indicative, by deletion of the final -s (in some cases, an accent mark must be added to the vowel which precedes it). For other persons, and for negative clauses, the present subjunctive takes the role of imperative.
Pronunciation of present inflections
In the present tense, the stress fluctuates between the root and the termination. As a rule of thumb, the last radical vowel (the one that can be stressed) will retain its original pronunciation when unstressed (atonic) and change into [a], [e/ɛ] (subjunctive or indicative 1st pers sing/infinitive), or [o/ɔ] (subjunctive or indicative 1st pers sing/infinitive) – depending on the vowel in question – in case it is stressed (is in a tonic syllable). Other vowels (u, i) and nasalized vowels (before closed syllables) stay unchanged, as well as the verbs with the diphthongs -ei, -eu, -oi, -ou; they always keep a closed-mid pronunciation; e.g. deixo /ej/ (deixar), endeuso /ew/ (endeusar), açoito /oj/ (açoitar), roubo /ow/ (roubar), etc. Alternation in stem-stressed forms is blocked when a nasal consonant (/m/, /n/ or /ɲ/) follows, in which case the higher alternant (i.e. /ɐ/, /e/ or /o/) is used in all forms. For example, in the verb comer, all of the forms como, comes, come, comem have /o/.
Example: Consider the conjugation of correr (analogous to comer, presented above) in the Indicative Present Simple. The first-person singular corro has [o] in the stressed vowel, while other forms corres, corre, correm have [ɔ].
In Brazil, the following difference applies: Stem-unstressed forms consistently have /o/ or /e/ for most speakers in most verbs, but there are exceptions, with some dialects (e.g. northeastern Brazilian dialects) likely to present an open form /ɔ/ or /ɛ/. At times, the difference is not particularly clear, producing [o̞], [e̞], particularly in transition zones like the states of Rio de Janeiro, Espírito Santo, Minas Gerais and the Brazilian Federal District, unless vowel harmony is involved (e.g. comove "move, touch (emotionally)" [kɔˈmɔvi]).
This also has repercussions in the imperative and present subjunctive, for their inflections are constructed from the indicative present simple and indicative present simple in the 1st singular person respectively.
Verbs pelar, amar and rendar
Verbs correr, temer and vender
Verbs dormir, lenir and sentir
See also
References
- Cook, Manuela (2013). "Portuguese Pronouns and Other Forms of Address, from the Past into the Future — Structural, Semantic and Pragmatic Reflections". Ellipsis. 11. doi:10.21471/jls.v11i0.84.
- Freire, Naiade Anido (2008). Les verbes portugais: formes et emplois. Bescherelle collection. Hatier. ISBN 978-2-218-93177-2. OCLC 1041442854.
External links
For a list of words relating to Portuguese verbs, see the Portuguese verbs category of words in
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
- Conjugate.click, conjugation of Portuguese verbs, features include hiding/unhiding tu/vós forms which only used is some regions of Brazil, clear-human voice annunciation for most infinitive forms of the verb, illustrations for better retention, etc.
- Online Portuguese Verb Conjugator, fast and simple verb conjugator with irregular forms highlighting.
- Conjugation paradigm for Portuguese regular verbs, at Orbis Latinus
- LX-Conjugator Online conjugator with support for pronominal conjugation (up to three clitics)
- Conjuga-me A very complete online conjugator for Portuguese
- Verb ConjugationTrainer by Tudo Bem Portuguese Web app for memorizing Portuguese verb conjugations