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.
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
The present subjunctive of the verb 'venir' is formed from the stems vienn- and ven-. In the singular, the conjugation is as follows: que je vienne [that I may come], que tu viennes [that you may come], qu'il/elle vienne [that he/she/it may come]. In the plural, the conjugation is the following: que nous venions [that we may come], que vous veniez [that you may come], qu'ils viennent [that they may come].
All of these verbs have an irregular yo (first person) form.
If you mean the verb 'to come', it's 'venir'. It could also be the verb 'ir' if you mean something like 'can I come with you?'
Venga from the verb "venir"e.g. Venga! - Come on! (as in hurry up!)Venga, no seas así! - Come on, don`t be like that!Venga, era broma! - Come on, it was a joke!
The French verb "venir" (to come) is irregular in conjugation. Here is the conjugation in the present tense: Je viens (I come) Tu viens (You come) Il/Elle vient (He/She comes) Nous venons (We come) Vous venez (You come) Ils/Elles viennent (They come)
"Have" is an irregular verb in English.
"Wrote" is an irregular verb.
The Spanish verb for 'to come' is 'venir'.
It's an irregular verb.
Shake is an irregular verb. Shook and Shaken are also forms of this irregular verb.
irregular verb irregular verb
It's an irregular verb.
To swim is an irregular verb.
Yes it's an irregular verb.
Yes it's an irregular verb.
It's an irregular verb.