Posts tagged with "past indefinite perfect tense"

The verbs in this post end in a vowel in the stem of the verb. When the stem ends in a vowel, the suffix या is attached to the stem of the verb.

This is the stem of the verb to drink: पी

I drank water – मैंने पानी पीया

We drank water – हमने पानी पीया

You drank water – आपने पानी पीया

He drank water – उसने पानी पीया

She drank water – उसने पानी पीया

They drank water – उन्होंने पानी पीया

Couple of clarifications:

1) water = पानी, पी = verb stem (to drink), या = suffix

If the past indefinite perfect tense is still shaky, check back at the previous post. It may clarify some issues.

 

In English, the past indefinite perfect tense is can be expressed as “I ate, I drank, I came” etc.

All verbs end in ना. However, when you take this ending off and take a look at the stem, some of them end in consonants and some of them end in vowels. For this post, we’ll look only look at verbs that end in a consonant in the stem or root ending of the verb.

Let’s take a look at this verb: कहना = to say

I said = मैंने कहा

We said = हमने कहा

You said = आपने कहा

He said = उसने कहा

She said = उसने कहा

They said = उन्होंने कहा

1) the masculine and feminine forms are the same in the past indefinite perfect tense

2) You’ll notice that the ने is attached to the pronouns I, we, you, he, she, and they. The ने is used for transitive verbs. Transitive verbs are used when an action performed by a doer affects someone or something other than the doer himself. In other words, the action is transferred to the object. In the sentence “John killed Judy”, killed is the transitive verb because Judy, not the doer John, is affected.

3) Whenever the stem of the verb ends in a consonant, add the suffix to the verb. कहना = to say, is the dictionary form of the verb. To conjugate this in the past indefinite perfect tense, take only the stem, which is कह and add and you get कहा. Don’t forget to add the ने before the  कहा.

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