Tener has numerous entirely regular components:
Present Indicative: the nosotros form (tenemos) and the vosotros form (tenéis) are regular.
Imperfect Indicative: the entire tense is regular: tenÃa, tenÃas, tenÃa, tenÃamos, tenÃais, tenÃan.
Present Participle: the present participle is regular: teniendo
Past Participle: the past participle is regular: tenido
Tener also has numerous regular components based on a previously irregular root:
Present Subjunctive: based on the root "yo tengo", the entire tense is regular: tenga, tengas, tenga, tengamos, tengáis, tengan
Imperfect Subjunctive: based on the root "ellos tuvieron", the entire tense is regular in both (ra) and (se): tuviera, tuvieras, tuviera, tuviéramos, tuvierais, tuvieran / tuviese, tuvieses, tuviese, tuviésemos, tuvieseis, tuviesen
Future Indicative: based on the future root: "tendr", the entire tense is regular: tendré, tendrás, tendrá, tendremos, tendréis, tendrán
Conditional: based on the future root: "tendr", the entire tense is regular: tendrÃa, tendrÃas, tendrÃa, tendrÃamos, tendrÃais, tendrÃan
The only form of the verb "tener" that is not irregular is the infinitive form "tener" itself. All other conjugations of "tener" have slight irregularities in order to maintain the correct pronunciation and stress pattern.
"Began" is an irregular verb. Its past tense form does not follow the usual pattern of adding "-ed" to the base form of the verb.
The irregular past tense form of the verb "say" is "said."
The irregular verb form of "knew" is "known."
"Have" is an irregular verb in English. This means that its past tense form ("had") and past participle form ("had") do not follow the typical pattern of verb conjugation.
An example of an irregular verb in past participle form is "taken" from the verb "take."
to have is the infinitive form of the irregular verb "tener" "yo tengo " means exactly the same like the phrase "i have "
No, the Spanish word "tener" is a verb. It is the infinitive form of the verb "to have."
Tener is the infinitive form of the verb "to have".
Yes, it is an irregular verb. Because it stem-changes (e-->i), that makes it an irregular verb. No only that, but it has an irregular yo form in the present tense (vengo), which makes it even more irregular.
The Spanish verb tener means "to have". It is one of the irregular verbs, so the conjugations must be memorized. They are tengo, tienes, tiene, tenemos, teneis, and tienen.
Yes, "bend" is an irregular verb. Its past tense is "bent" and its past participle is also "bent."
Irregular verbs do not follow the usual pattern of conjugation in a language. They have unique forms for past tense, past participle, and present participle that do not follow the standard rules of verb conjugation. These irregular forms must be memorized separately from regular verbs.
Was is an example of irregular verb. Was is the past form of be. Here's the definition of irregular verb and regular verb. IRREGULAR VERB A verb that does not follow the usual rules for verb forms: be, is, are/ was, were , been REGULAR VERB A verb that forms its past tense and past participle by adding -d or -ed to the base form: walk, walked, walked; shout, shouted, shouted.
Regular and irregular.
Lie is an irregular verb and the past tense is lay.Lie is only an irregular verb.
English- verb- irregular tu form To make/do- hacer- haz To come- venir- ven To go- ir- ve To be- ser- se(accent on e) To leave- salir- sal To tell- decir- di to put- poner- pon To have- tener- ten
Irregular verbs are verbs that congagate differently. For example, tener. Tengo, tienes, tiene, tenemos, teneis, tienen. That is irregular. A regular verb is like nadar where it follows the regular pattern.