Hebrew_verb_conjugation

Modern Hebrew verbs

Modern Hebrew verbs

Verb conjugation in Modern Hebrew grammar


In Hebrew, verbs, which take the form of derived stems, are conjugated to reflect their tense and mood, as well as to agree with their subjects in gender, number, and person. Each verb has an inherent voice, though a verb in one voice typically has counterparts in other voices. This article deals mostly with Modern Hebrew, but to some extent, the information shown here applies to Biblical Hebrew as well.

Verb classification

Roots

Verbs in Hebrew, like nouns, adjectives, and adverbs, are formed and declined by altering a (usually) three-letter stem, known as a shoresh (שורש transl.root). Vowels are added between or before these three consonants in a pattern to form a related meaning between different roots. For instance, shamar (שמר) "(he) kept / guarded" and katav (כתב) "(he) wrote" both add the vowel "a" in between the first and second consonants and second and third consonants to indicate the past tense "he" form. A similar formation can be found in English strong verbs with write-wrote-written and drive-drove-driven sharing root consonants despite differing vowels and meanings.

Hebrew verbs are further divided into strong roots (regular verbs, with occasional and predictable consonant irregularities), weak roots (predictable verbs irregular by vowel), and wholly irregular verbs.

A root that changes the vowel used in a given pattern is considered a weak stem. These are further divided into guttural (containing alef, hey, het, ayin anywhere, or resh as the second root), hollow (containing vav or yud anywhere, or hey as the final root), and repeating roots (beginning with nun or ending with two of the same consonant); based on exact irregularities. Weak verbs are detailed further below:

Guttural weak roots

Guttural roots contain a guttural consonant (such as alef (א), hey (ה), het (ח), or ayin (ע) in any position; or resh (ר) as the second letter). Hey (ה) as the third root is usually a hollow root marker due to being a vowel spelling rather than one of any consonant, and is only considered a guttural root in the third position if historically pronounced. Alef (א) root-initially and root-finally takes on a somewhat divergent conjugation similar to that of hollow roots, but is usually identical to other gutturals. Of the three classes of weak roots, guttural roots are the most common.

Vowel weak roots

Roots containing a vav (ו) or yud (י) anywhere mark a historical vowel. Hey (ה) word-finally usually marks a final vowel for the same reason, and shares similar irregularities.

Repeating weak roots

Roots containing two of the same letter or a nun (נ) in first position are considered repeating roots. Nun (נ) before a consonant doubles it or prevents beyt (בּ), kaf (כּ), and pey (פּ) from becoming veyt, khaf, and fey in word-medial position. Doubling consonants also changes the quality of the preceding vowel. However, doubling a consonant that doesn't change it outright (gemination) is obsolete in Modern Hebrew, and the irregularities usually affect the vowels.

Initial sibilants: metathesis

When the initial letter of a shoresh is one of the sibilants ז (Zayin), ס (Samekh), צ (Tsade) or ש (Shin), then in Hitpa'el there is a phenomenon called metathesis, in which the sibilant trades places with a preceding ת (Tav); In addition, the ת (Tav) preceding a ז (Zayin) changes to a ד (Daleth) and the ת (Tav) preceding a צ (Tsade) changes to a ט (Teth).[1] E.g., מִזְדַּקֵּן, הִסְתַּכַּלְנוּ, אֶצְטָרֵף, לְהִשְׁתַּמֵּשׁ.

Stems

Hebrew verbs are inflected according to specific patterns, derived stems, called forms or בִּנְיָנִים (/binjaˈnim/ binyanim, "constructions"); where vowel patterns (משקלים /miʃkaˈlim/ mishkalim, "weights"), affixes are put into the (usually) three-letter roots from which the vast majority of Hebrew words are made.

There are seven basic conjugations, as well as some irregular verbs coming from otherwise-obsolete constructions. The traditional demonstration root is פ.ע.ל (p-`-l), which has the basic meaning of "(He has) acted":

More information root: פעל‎, active ...

This chart's menorah-like shape is sometimes invoked in teaching the binyanim to help students remember the main ideas about the verb forms: (1) which binyanim are active voice (left side) vs. passive voice (right side), and (2) which binyanim are simple (outer-most menorah branches), intensive (second-outer-most), causative (third-outer-most), and reflexive (center). Note that some binyanim have more meanings than the ones shown here, as well as obsolete and rare ones being left off entirely.

In Early Modern Hebrew, the verb paradigm nitpa'el was much more common than hitpa'el, but it was ultimately marginalized because its meanings were a subset of hitpa'el.[2] Shira Wigderson has postulated that the early popularity of nitpa'el was due to the influence of Yiddish; as the influence of Yiddish waned over time, the popularity of nitpa'el declined.[2]

Regular conjugation

Present tense

A verb in the present tense (הוֹוֶה /(h)oˈve/ hove) agrees with its subject in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural), so each verb has four present-tense forms.

The present tense does not inflect by person because its use as a present tense is a relatively recent trend, as this form was originally used only as the present participle alone; rather than both the present tense verb and present participle.

Earlier forms of the Hebrew language did not have strictly defined past, present, or future tenses, but merely perfective and imperfective aspects, with past, present, or future connotation depending on context. Later the perfective and imperfective aspects were explicitly refashioned as the past and future tenses, respectively; with the present participle also becoming the present tense. This also happened to the Aramaic language around the same time, and later in some varieties of Arabic (such as Egyptian Arabic).

In these tables, every stressed syllable will be capitalized, except in monosyllabic words. Ayin will be represented by `, and aleph by ´, whenever pronounced.

More information Root Type, Singular ...
More information Root Type, Singular ...

Past tense

A verb in the past tense (עָבָר /(ʔ)aˈvaʁ/ 'avar) agrees with its subject in person (first, second, or third), number, and in the second-person and third-person singular, gender. The corresponding subject pronouns are not necessarily used in conjunction.

Conjugation in the past tense is done by adding a suffix (universal across binyanim) to a binyan-specific root, so that <שמר> "guarded" adds <תי-> "I" to become <שמרתי> "I guarded". The root changes depending on whether the suffix begins with a vowel or a consonant. The third person masculine singular pronoun (he/it) does not take a suffix and uses the plain stem; this is also the dictionary form for any given verb. There also used to be past-tense object suffixes, which came after the subject suffix, but these are obsolete.

More information Person, Singular ...
More information Stem, Suffix ...
More information Stem, 1st person ...

Past participle

Present participles are the same as present tense forms, as the Modern Hebrew present tense comes from a present participle form. Not all past participles shown here correspond to an existent adjective or one congruent to the verb's meaning; the ones shown here are just examples.

Past participles are formed according to the tables shown below. The past participle is also commonly used as an adjective (similar to English), and is inflected for number and gender. The passive and reflexive binyans hitpa'el, nif'al, pu'al, and huf'al lack passive participles. Pa'al verbs that have a nif'al form corresponding to its passive voice use the pa'al participle and nif'al present to indicate different states of completion.

The pa'al past participle indicates an action is completely done:

  • הַסְּפָרִים כְּתוּבִים /(h)a.sfaˈʁim ktuˈvim/ ("the books are written")

The nif'al present tense indicates that the action is still being done:

  • הַסְּפָרִים נִכְתָּבִים /(h)a.sfaˈʁim niχtaˈvim/ ("the books are being written")

As shown below, pi'el and hif'il past participles use the present tense of the passive forms pu'al and huf'al, respectively.

More information Stem, Singular ...
More information Stem, Singular ...

Future tense

A verb in the future tense (עָתִיד /(ʔ)aˈtid/ 'atid) inflects for person, number, and gender; which is expressed by adding prefixes and suffixes to stems shown below. The second-person singular masculine and third-person singular feminine forms are identical for all verbs in the future tense. Historically, there have been separate feminine forms for the second and third person plural (shown in italics on the table). These are still occasionally used today (most often in formal settings); however, in everyday speech, most use the historically masculine plural for both genders.

More information Person, Singular ...
More information Stem, 1st person ...
More information Stem, 1st person ...

As in the past tense, personal pronouns are not strictly necessary in the future tense, as the verb forms are sufficient to identify the subject, but they are frequently used.

Imperative

All imperatives are only used in affirmative commands, and in predominantly formal contexts. Negative commands use the particle אַל /al/ followed by the corresponding future-tense form; as לא and a future tense negates the declaration not the command (contrast "don't do it" with "[you] won't do it"). The passive binyanim pu'al and huf'al do not have imperatives.

In informal speech, the future tense (shown above) is commonly used for affirmative commands, to avoid the implication of being demanding. So, for example, תִּפְתַּח /tifˈtaħ/ can mean either "you will open" or "would you open" (masculine, singular). In Hebrew, as in English, the more formal way to avoid the implication of commanding is to use the word "please" (בְּבַקָּשָׁה /bevakaʃa/ or נָא /na/ ) with the imperative.

More information Person, Singular ...
More information Stem, Singular ...
More information Stem, Singular ...

The infinitive can also be used as a "general imperative" when addressing nobody in particular (i.e., on signs, or when giving general instructions, to children, or large groups); so "נָא לֹא לִפְתֹּחַ" /na lo lifˈtoaħ/ means "please do not open".

There also once were cohortative forms for the first person, and jussive forms for the imperative third person, but this is now obsolete.

Infinitive

In Modern Hebrew a verb has two infinitives: the infinitive construct[3] (שם הפועל shem hapoal or מקור נסמך) and the rarely used[4] infinitive absolute[5] (מקור מוחלט). The infinitive construct is generally preceded by a preposition (e.g. ב-, כ-, ל-, מ-, עד), usually the inseparable preposition -ל, meaning "to, for", although it can be used without a preposition. This article covers only infinitive construct with the preposition -ל. The passive binyans pu'al and huf'al do not have infinitives.

More information Stem, Prefixed ...
More information Stem, Prefixed ...

Action noun

Action nouns or gerunds (שמות פעולה shmot pe'ula) are nouns derived from a verb's action and so they inflect for number. In Hebrew, gerunds are formed using a specific pattern shown in the table below. Hebrew gerunds cannot be used as adjectives, unlike in English. The passive binyans pu'al and huf'al lack gerunds.

Not all gerunds shown here correspond to an attested noun or a noun with a meaning congruent to that of the verb.

More information Stem, Singular ...
More information Stem, Singular ...

Auxiliary verbs

Auxiliary verbs[6] are less common in Hebrew than in other languages. Some common פָּעֳלֵי עֵזֶר po'oley 'ezer (helping verbs) are היה /(h)aˈja/ haya, הלך /halaχ/ halakh, יָכֹל /jaχol/ yakhol, עמד /ʔamad/ 'amad.

In Modern Hebrew the auxiliary היה haya is used for both an analytic conditional/ past-habitual mood and for a simple past-habitual aspect. In either case, היה is conjugated in the past tense and placed before present tense conjugations of the affected verb.

הלך and עמד are used to express an imminent future action. They may be conjugated either in the past or present tense, and are followed by the infinitive construct of the affected verb, prefixed by the inseparable preposition -ל.

Modal auxiliaries are often adjectives, adverbs or modal verbs (often defective ones) conjugated in the present tense, and followed by the infinitive construct of the affected verb, prefixed by the inseparable preposition -ל. They may be used in conjunction with the auxiliary היה. Examples include אולי/ אוּלַי ulay, אסור/ אָסוּר asur, חיב/ חַיָּב chayav, מותר/ מֻתָּר mutar, and מוכרח/ מֻכְרָח mukhrach.

יָכֹל yakhol is used to express a possible action. It may be conjugated in past, present or future tense and is followed by the infinitive construct of the affected verb, prefixed by the inseparable preposition -ל.

נִתְכַּן nitkan is used to express a plausible or planned action. It is conjugated in the future tense and is followed with the affected verb prefixed with שֶׁ־ she.

Example: לא יתכן שהוא רעב/ לֹא יִתָּכֵן שֶהוּא רָעֵב Lo yitakhen shehu` ra'ev ("He's unlikely to be hungry")

Irregular verbs

אמר הגיד Amar/Higid (to say, tell)

The verb אמר/ אָמַר is often replaced with forms of הגיד/ הִגִּיד higid in common speech in the future, imperative, and infinitive. Likewise, the verb הגיד/ הִגִּיד is replaced with forms of אמר /אָמַר amar in the past and present. However, in formal speech, regular forms for each verb are still used, which are displayed in italics when in uncommon tenses.

More information to say, tell, אמר Amar ...

בא Ba (to come)

Irregular pa'al verb with regards to final alef א not causing vowel changes to the stem.

More information בא Ba to come, Singular ...

גדל Gadel (to grow)

Pa'al verb irregular in the present, action noun, and to a lesser extent in the imperative and future.

More information גדל Gadel to grow, Singular ...

הלך Halakh (to go, to walk)

Pa'al verb irregular in the prefixed infinitive, future tense, and imperative mood.

More information הלך Halakh to go, to walk, Singular ...

היה Haya (to be)

The verb היה is often replaced by the adjective קַיָּם /קיים or the verb הִתְקַיֵּם /התקיים in the present tense.

It is regular in most forms except the present (which is rarely used) and imperative. In addition, the future third person singular has two other irregular forms.

More information היה Haya to be, Singular ...

יכול Yakhol (can, to be able to)

Entirely irregular verb with no imperative form. The past tense masculine singular often adds היה haya for disambiguation.

More information יכול Yakhol can, to be able to, Singular ...

ישן Yashen (to sleep)

Pa'al verb irregular in the present tense and action noun.

More information ישן Yashen to sleep, Singular ...

לקח Laqach (to take)

Functions as an initial-n pa'al verb, and has a shortened imperative.

More information לקח Laqach to take, Singular ...

מת Met (to die)

Mainly irregular in the present tense and impersonal forms, and has two different action nouns.

More information מת Met to die, Singular ...

ניגש Nigash (to approach, get to)

Nif'al verb that takes forms from obsolete pa'al נגש nagash in the future, imperative, and infinitive.

More information ניגש Nigash to approach, to get to, Singular ...

נשא Nasa' (to carry, bear)

Pa'al verb mainly irregular in the prefixed infinitive and imperative.

More information נשא Nasa' to carry, bear, Singular ...

נתן Natan (to give, to let)

Pa'al verb mainly irregular in the prefixed infinitive and imperative.

More information נתן Natan to give, let, Singular ...

פחד/פיחד Pachad/Piched (to fear, be afraid of)

Similar to amar / higid, this verb is somewhat suppletive, with the forms from פחד pachad mainly being used in the past tense. The synonymous פיחד piched is used elsewhere. פחד Pachad is a regular pa'al verb on the whole, and פיחד piched is a regular pi'el verb.

More information to fear, be afraid of, פחד Pachad ...

קטון Katon (to dwindle)

Functions like a regular pa'al verb in the past tense and infinitive, and to a lesser extent the future and imperative.

More information קטון Katon to dwindle, Singular ...

See also


References

  1. Glinis, Lewis (26 May 1989). "40.20 Roots beginning with a sibilant: metathesis, e.g., הסתדר histader 'manage'" (PDF). The Grammar of Modern Hebrew (PDF). Cambridge University Press. p. 477. ISBN 0-521-25611-9. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
  2. Wigderson, Shira (2015-10-16). "The Sudden Disappearance of Nitpael and the Rise of Hitpael in Modern Hebrew, and the Role of Yiddish in the Process". Journal of Jewish Languages. 3 (1–2): 199–206. doi:10.1163/22134638-12340031.
  3. "Infinitive Construct". unfoldingWord Hebrew Grammar. The infinitive construct generally functions as a verbal complement to a finite verb, but in rare cases it also functions independently as a noun. The infinitive construct is described as being in the construct state because it can occur in various constructions with prepositions, suffixes, and other nouns in a construct chain.
  4. Geoffrey Khan; et al. (eds.). "Infinitive: Modern Hebrew". Encyclopedia of Hebrew Language and Linguistics Online. Brill. Modern Hebrew inherited the morphological forms of all the infinitive kinds set in the previous periods of the language, but their syntactic, semantic and lexical distributions are different. MH has absolute infinitive forms like צעוד ṣaʻod ʻmarchingʼ, and two forms of construct infinitive: (a). inflected infinitive or infinitive preceded by a preposition, sometimes called gerund (Rosén 1977:104-106), e.g. היותו heyot-o ʻhis beingʼ, למות le-mot ʻto the de …
  5. "Infinitive Absolute". unfoldingWord Hebrew Grammar. ... The Infinitive Absolute is described as being in the absolute state because it stands on its own as an independent grammatical entity. The form can appear with the conjunction, but it never occurs in any other kind of construction with a prefix or suffix, an attached preposition, or with a noun in a construct chain.
  6. Ruth A. Berman. "On The Category Of Auxiliary In Modern Hebrew" (PDF). Tel Aviv University.

Bibliography


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