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Verbs: Perfect Tense

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Learn German / verbs/ perfect tense

Tenses show when something happens - the past, present or the future. The perfect tense is a past tense.

The perfect tense refers to an action that has happened in the past and is made up of three parts:

Prounouns

Pronoun German
I Ich
You (singular) Du
He/she/it/you/one Er/sie/es/man
We wir
You (plural) ihr
They Sie
You (formal) Sie

You could start a sentence with a pronoun, eg '

Ich habe Fussball gespielt

' (I played football). You could also start it with a noun, eg '

Der Hund hat Fussball gespielt

' (the dog played football). You

always

need one or the other.

Haben or sein

Present tense of Haben and Sein

Haben - to have

Pronoun Present tense
ich habe
du hast
er/sie/es/man hat
wir haben
ihr habt
sie/Sie haben

When to use Haben

Sein - to be

Pronoun Present tense
ich bin
du bist
er/sie/es/man ist
wir sind
ihr seid
sie/Sie sind

When to use Sein

Sentences about going from one place to another, eg went, came or travelled always use

sein.

How to form the past participle of weak (regular) verbs:

  1. Add '-ge' to the front of the infinitive, remove the '-en' from the infinitive and add '-t', eg spielen -> gespielt.
  2. Some need an extra 'e' (see examples) to make them easy to pronounce.
  3. They all go with haben.

Example use of past participle weak verbs

Strong (irregular) past participles

Common strong (irregular) past participles:

If you arenโ€™t sure whether a verb is weak or strong, look it up in a verb table in a dictionary or online.

Past participles without 'ge-' at the start

Some verbs donโ€™t add a 'ge-' to the front. These verbs:

Examples

Past participles of separable verbs

Separable verbs, eg 'phone up', 'shut down' and 'look into' have two bits. In English, we leave them separate in the past tense (I phoned you up). In German both bits need to be put back together to make the past participle, with the 'ge' sandwiched in between, eg '

Ich habe dich angerufen

'.

Think of the structure of the perfect tense as having three elements plus optional extras. Take this sentence:

Ich habe FuรŸball gespielt

(I played football).

  1. Element one: pronoun, eg ich
  2. Element two: auxiliary verb, eg habe
  3. Optional extra bit, eg FuรŸball
  4. Element three: past participle, eg gespielt

If you follow this pattern, you will always end up with correct word order. All three elements

must

be included. Here are some more examples of perfect tense sentences, with the pieces divided up into the three elements.

Past tense examples

Pronouns/nouns Auxiliary verbs Optional extra Past participle
Wir sind am Samstag ins Kino gegangen
Mein Freund hat eine Halskette fรผr mich gekauft
Ich habe getanzt
Sie haben einen Film gesehen
Er ist mit dem Bus nach Bognor gefahren

Common mistakes made by English speakers

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