verb in Russian. Verb rules and their spelling What verbs stand for

The meaning of the verb, its morphological features and syntactic function

Verb is an independent part of speech that denotes an action, state or attitude and answers questions what to do? what to do?: work, clean, get sick, be afraid, desire, consist. All forms verb have morphological features of the species (there are perfect or imperfect species) and transitivity (they are transitional or intransitive). Among the verb forms there are conjugated(change in moods, tenses, persons or genders, as well as numbers) and non-conjugated(initial form verb, participles and participles).

In a sentence, conjugated verb forms play the role of a predicate (they have special forms of predicate - forms of mood and time), non-conjugated verb forms can be other members of the sentence. For example: Mermaid floated along the blue river, illuminated by the full moon ... (M. Lermontov); So thought young rake, flying in the dust on the mail... (A. Pushkin).

Infinitive

The initial (dictionary) form of the verb is infinitive, or infinitive(from lat. infiniti - vus - "indefinite"). The infinitive denotes an action regardless of mood, time, person, number, that is, without its connection with the agent (subject).

The infinitive is an invariable form of the verb, which has only constant morphological features of the verb: aspect, transitivity / intransitivity, reflexivity / irreversibility, type of conjugation. (If in conjugated verb forms the ending is unstressed, then the type of conjugation is determined by the infinitive.)

The formal indicators of the infinitive are suffixes -ty, -ty(at school they are usually treated as graduations). Suffix -th comes after vowels (follow, think, sing) a -ti- after consonants (carry, carry, weave). Some verbs end in the infinitive with -ch: oven, cherish, flow, be able and etc.; historically in -whose merged infinitive -ti and final root sound [G] or [to]: type forms "pekti", "protect" as a result of phonetic changes, they were transformed into "bake", "save" etc.

In a sentence, the infinitive can be any part of the sentence. For example: 1) Be in love others - a heavy cross ... (B. Pasternak); 2) He [Startsev] decided to go to the Turkins(for what purpose?) see what kind of people they are (A. Chekhov); 3) I acted carelessly, indulging in the sweet habit of seeing and hearing you every day (A. Pushkin); 4) The cleanest shirts orders put on the captain!_ (B. Okudzhava).

Note. Example (2) - with verbs of motion (leave, go etc.) or cessation of movement (stop, stay, sit down etc.) the infinitive is a circumstance of the goal (names the goal of movement or cessation of movement): Sometimes in the sands he stopped(for what purpose?) relax (K. Paustovsky).

Example (4) - the infinitive is not included in the predicate and is an addition in the sentence if it denotes the action of another person (object), not the one called the subject.

Verb stems

The verb has two basics: stem of the infinitive and basis of the present/simple future tense.(Sometimes it also stands out basis of past tense but for most verbs it coincides with the stem of the infinitive.) Part of the verb forms is formed from basics infinitive, and the other part - from basics present/simple future tense. These two basics many verbs are different.

To highlight the stem of the infinitive, you need to separate the formative suffix of the infinitive: carried- you, piss- t, speak- th, read- uh, rice- th.

To highlight the basis of the present / simple future tense, it is necessary to separate the personal ending from the form of the present / simple future tense (usually the form of the 3rd person plural is taken): carried- ut, write- uh, talk- yat, chita j - ut, pucyj - ut.

To highlight basis past tense, you need to discard the formative suffix -l- and the ending from the past tense form (you can use any form except the masculine singular form, since it can contain a zero suffix, which makes it difficult to select basics): carried- l-a, piss- l-a, speak- l-a, read- l-a, rice a- l-a.

There are verbs that have the same basics the infinitive and the present/simple future tense, and the basis of the past tense differs from them: id- ti, id- ut, sh- l-a. basics different: get wet- th, wet- ut, wet- l-a; tere- t, tr- ut, ter- l-a. There are verbs that have all three basics match: carried- you, carried- ut, carried- la.

Verb forms that are formed from the stem of the infinitive

Verb forms that are formed from the basis of the present / simple future tense

1. Forms of the past tense of the indicative mood: carried-l-a, wrote-l-a, spoke, read, drew-a.

1. Forms of the present and the simple future tense of the indicative mood: I carry, write, I say, 4 umaj- y (spelling - read) pucyj- y(drawing).

2. Forms of the conditional mood: would carry, would write, would speak, would read, would draw.

2. Forms of the imperative mood: carry, write, speak, read) (read), drawing) (draw).

3. Real past participles: carried, wrote, spoke, read, drew.

3. Real participles of the present tense: carrier, write-ouch-th, speaking, chita j-ug-th (reading),pucyj-ug-th (drawing).

4. Passive past participles: carried away, written, drawn-nn-yp.

4. Passive participles of the present tense: carried-ohm-th, talk-i.ch-th, chitauem-th (readable), pucyj-um-th (drawable).

5. Perfect participles: writing, speaking, reading, drawing.

5. Imperfect participles: nes-i, saying, read" ja (reading)pucyj- a(drawing).

Verb type

Verbs in Russian belong to one of two types: to imperfect or to perfect.

Verbs perfect look answer the question what to do? and denote an action limited in its duration, having an internal limit, completeness. Perfect verbs can denote an action that has ended (or will end) by achieving a result (learn, draw) an action that has begun (or will begin), and this very beginning of the action is understood as its border, limit (play, sing) single action (push, shout, jump- verbs with suffix -well).

Verbs imperfect form answer the question what to do? and indicate an action without specifying

to its limit, without limiting its course in time, the action is long or repeated (learn, draw, play, shout).

Imperfect and perfect verbs form species pairs. The species pair is imperfective verb and a perfective verb that have the same lexical meaning and differ only in meaning kind: read- read, write - write, build- build.

Imperfect verbs formed from perfective verbs with suffixes:

1) -iva-, -iva-: consider- consider, ask- ask, subscribe- sign;

2) -wa: open- open, give- give, put on- put on shoes;

3) -a-(-z): save- save, rise- grow up.

Perfective verbs are formed from imperfective verbs in various ways:

1) using view attachments on-, off-, pro-, you-, on- and etc,: treat- cure, oven- bake, make- do, write - write, read- read, build- build, teach- learn etc. (But more often, with the help of a prefix, perfective verbs are formed, which differ from imperfective verbs not only in the meaning of the aspect, but also in a change in lexical meaning; such verbs do not form a specific pair: read- reread, reread, reread etc.);

2) using a suffix -uh-: get used to- get used to, nod- nod, jump- jump.

Some verbs that make up the aspect pair may differ only in the place of stress: scatter- sprinkle, cut- slice.

Separate aspectual pairs make up verbs with different roots: talk- say, search- find, put- put, take- take.

Some verbs are single-species. They do not form a species pair and are either only perfect look (find yourself, rush, sleep, scream etc.), or only imperfect form (predominate, be present, sit, be).

There are also two-species verbs that combine in one form the meaning with perfect and imperfect. Their appearance is set from the context: marry, execute, injure, command, as well as verbs with suffixes -ova (t), -irova (t): influence, use, automate, pave, telegraph etc. For example: The guns from the pier are firing, the ship is ordered to land (what are they doing?) (A. Pushkin); Would you like me to order (what will I do?) to bring a rug? (N. Gogol).

Verb type influences the formation of its forms (first of all, the forms of time): imperfective verbs in the indicative mood there are forms of all three tenses (moreover, in the future tense they have a complex form) and a full set of temporary forms of participles; at perfective verbs there are no forms of the present tense in the indicative mood (the form of the future tense is simple) and participles of the present tense.

Verbs transitive and intransitive

Differ transitive and intransitive verbs.

transitional Verbs denote an action that is directly directed at an object. They may carry a direct object in the accusative case without a preposition, answering the question whom?"/What?", write an article, knit a sweater, sing a song.

Instead of the accusative case, the object with a transitive verb can also be in the genitive case without a preposition:

1) if there is a negative particle not before a transitive verb: understood the task- did not understand the task; read a novel- did not read the novel; waste time- do not waste time;

2) if the action does not transfer to the whole object, but only to its part: drank water(all the water in question) - drank some water(part), fetch firewood- bring firewood.

When determining transitivity / intransitivity of verbs it is necessary to take into account the meaning of the noun in the form of the accusative case - it must name the object of the action. Wed: stand for an hour (in line) or live for a week (at sea), where the verbs are not transitive, although after them there are nouns in the accusative case without a preposition: All night long(vp with time value, not object) thundered(verb intransitive) a neighboring ravine, a stream, bubbling, ran to the stream (A. Fet).

Verbs that cannot carry a direct object are intransitive: engage(how?) sports, understanding(in what?) in music, refuse(from what?) from help.

Note. Transitivity / intransitivity closely related to the lexical meaning of the verb: in one meaning the verb can be transitive, and in the other intransitive. Wed: I'm telling the truth (I'm telling the truth“I say” is a transitive verb). The child is already talking- "talks" - intransitive verb); Tomorrow I will go alone, I will teach(intransitive verb) at school and I will give my whole life to those who may need it (A. Chekhov); learn lessons(transitive verb).

Reflexive verbs

To reflexive verbs include verbs with a postfix -sya, -ss. All reflexive verbs are intransitive. They are formed as from transitive verbs (distinguish - differ, please- rejoice, dress- dress), and from intransitive (knock- knock, blacken- blacken). From ordinary derivational suffixes -sya differs in that it is attached to verb forms after the endings (knocking, knocking). Suffix -sya added after consonants -ss- after vowels (studied- studied); in participle forms and after vowels is added -sya, and not -s: different - different.

Joining transitive verbs, suffix -sya turns them into intransitives: wears whom? / what?- gets dressed. Joining intransitive verbs -sya reinforces the meaning of intransitivity: turns white- turns white.

Suffix -sya also serves to form impersonal forms from personal verbs: I am not sleeping- I can't sleep, I want- I would like to.

Among verbs with the suffix -sya there are also those that do not have parallel forms without this suffix: laugh, hope, bow, fight and etc.

Verb conjugations

Conjugation - this is a change of the verb in persons and numbers. (Term conjugated forms verb is used in a broader sense than the term conjugation . The conjugated forms of the verb include all forms, except for the infinitive, participles and participles, i.e. forms of all moods.)

Depending on personal endings in Russian, it is customary to distinguish two conjugations - I and II, which differ from each other in vowels in the endings: carry, sing, speak, be silent, carry, sing, speak, be silent, carry, sing, speak, be silent, carry, sing, speak, be silent, carry, sing, speak, be silent

I conjugation

II conjugation

If the ending is percussive, conjugation determined at the end: you call, you lead I conjugation, burn, sleep-II conjugation.

But most of the verbs conjugation has no accent on personal endings. In such cases conjugation determined by the infinitive (by the vowel that comes before the infinitive suffix).

Co II conjugation include those verbs with an unstressed personal ending, in which 1) the infinitive ends in -i-t (carry, cut, spend etc.), except for verbs shave, lay, rare verbs be based(“to build, to build”) and be ruffled("to vacillate, to sway, to swell"). (Verbs be based and be ruffled are used only in the form of 3 person units. and plural. numbers, other forms are not used.); 2) exception verbs whose infinitive ends in -e-t (look, see, hate, offend, depend, endure, twirl) and on -a-be (drive, hold, hear, breathe).

All other verbs with unstressed personal endings belong to I conjugation.

It should be remembered that prefixed verbs formed from non-prefixed ones are of the same type conjugations, which is unprefixed (drive- catch up- overtake- expel etc. - II conjugation). Verbs with -sya (-sya) belong to the same type of conjugation as without -sya (s) (drive- chase-II conjugation).

There are also heterogeneous verbs in the Russian language, in which one form is formed according to I conjugation, and others - according to II. These include: 1) to want- in the singular changes according to I conjugation (want- want- wants), and in the plural - according to II (want- want to- want); 2) run, which has all forms, as in verbs of II conjugation (running- running- running- run- run), except 3rd person plural. numbers - run(according to I conjugation); 3) honor- changes according to II conjugation (revere- honors- honor- honor), except 3rd person plural. numbers (revere) although there is a form honor, which is now used less frequently than honor; 4) glimpse(“to dawn, to glow a little”) - is used only in the form of the 3rd person singular (snaps-II conjugation) and plural (squeamish- I conjugation): Dawn breaks a little; The stars twinkle faintly in the sky.

Uncharacteristic for verbs I and II conjugations verbs have an ending system (archaic) eat, get bored, give, create(and their prefix derivatives: overeat, overeat, surrender, give away, betray, recreate and etc.).

eat eat

ladies give give give

eat eat eat

give dad-they will give

Verb to be also idiosyncratic. Rarely used forms of the 3rd person singular have survived from it in modern Russian. and plural. present tense numbers there is and essence: A straight line is the shortest distance between two points; The most common abstractions accepted by almost all historians are: freedom, equality, enlightenment, progress, civilization, culture (L. Tolstoy), and the future tense is formed from another root: will- you will- will be- we will- you will- will.

It should be remembered that verbs are conjugated (change in persons and numbers) only in the present and simple future tenses. If the form of the future is complex (in imperfective verbs), then only the auxiliary verb is conjugated to be, and the main verb is taken in the infinitive. Verbs in the past tense do not conjugate (do not change by person).

verb mood

Verbs change according to moods. The form inclinations shows how the action relates to reality: whether the action is real (taking place in reality), or unreal (desired, required, possible under certain conditions).

In Russian, verbs have forms of three moods: indicative, conditional (subjunctive) and imperative.

Verbs in indicative mood denote a real action that is happening, has happened or will actually happen in a certain time (present, past or future). Verbs in the indicative mood change over time: doing(present tense) was engaged(past tense), I will study(future time).

Verbs in conditional mood do not denote real actions, but desired, possible ones. Conditional mood forms are formed from the stem of the infinitive (or the stem of the past tense) with the help of the suffix -l-(followed by an ending with the meaning of number and, in the singular, gender) and particles would (b)(which can be before the verb, after it, or can be torn off from it). For example: If I were a poet, I would live like a goldfinch and would not whistle in a cage, but on a branch at dawn (Y. Moritz).

AT conditional verbs change according to numbers and gender (in this mood there is no time and person): would pass, would pass, would pass, would pass.

Verbs in imperative mood denote an impulse to action (a request, an order), that is, they denote not a real action, but a required one. In the imperative mood verbs change in numbers and persons (there is also no time in this mood).

The most common forms are 2 person singular and plural, which express the motivation for action of the interlocutor (interlocutors).

Form 2 persons unit. number is formed from the basis of the present / simple future tense using the suffix -and- or without a suffix (in this case, the stem of the verb in the imperative mood is the same as the stem of the present/simple future tense): talk, look, write, hold, work(the basis of the present tense is pa6 omaj- ym), rest (rest) -ut), remember (rememberj-ut), cut (cut), get up (get up).

Form 2 persons pl. numbers are formed from the form of the 2nd person unit. numbers with ending -te: speak- \those\, hold- \those\, for-remember- \those\ and etc.

Forms 3 persons unit. and many others. the numbers express the motivation for action of one or those who are not participating in the dialogue. They are formed by particles let, let, yes + 3rd person forms or many indicative numbers: let it go, let it go, long live, long liveetc.: Yes they know the descendants of the Orthodox native land past fate (A. Pushkin).

Form 1 person pl. numbers expresses an impulse to joint action, of which the speaker himself is a participant. It is made up of particles. come on let's + infinitive of imperfective verbs (let's, let's + sing, dance, play) or 4- form of the 1st person pl. indicative mood numbers of perfective verbs (come on, let's + sing, dance, play): Let's talk complimenting each other... (B. Okudzhava); Let's drop words like a garden- amber and zest... (B. Pasternak); comrade life, let's faster stomp, stomp the rest of the five-year period ... (V. Mayakovsky).

Mood forms can be used not only in their direct meaning, but also in a figurative meaning, that is, in a meaning characteristic of another mood.

For example, the imperative mood form can; have the meanings of the conditional mood (1) and indicative (2): 1) Do not be for that, God's will, they would not give up Moscow (M. Lermontov);2) Since he told him tell:“I see, Azamat, that you really liked this horse” (M. Lermontov).

Verb in the indicative mood can be used as an imperative: However, it is already dark in the field; hurry up! went, went Andryushka! (A. Pushkin); The commandant walked around his army, telling the soldiers: “Well, kids, let's stand today for the mother empress and we will prove to the whole world that we are brave people and jurymen ”(A. Pushkin).

The form of the conditional mood can have the meaning of the imperative: papa, you would talk to Alexandra, she behaves desperately (M. Gorky).

verb tense

In the indicative mood, verbs change in tense. Forms of time express the relation of action to the moment of speech. In Russian, there are forms of three tenses: present, past and future. The number of tense forms and the way they are formed depends on the type of the verb. Imperfective verbs have three forms of tense, and their future form is complex. Perfective verbs have only two tense forms (they have no present tense), the future form is simple.

The form present time shows that the action coincides with the moment of speech or is carried out constantly, regularly repeated: On full steam rushing train, wheels twirls locomotive ... (B. Pasternak); Oh how deadly we are love, how in violent blindness of passions, we are most likely destroy, what is dear to our hearts! (F. Tyutchev).

Only imperfective verbs have present tense forms. They are formed with the help of endings that are attached to the basis of the present tense and indicate at the same time not only time, but also person and number. The set of endings depends on the conjugation.

The form past tense shows that the action precedes the moment of speech: We all learned little by little something and somehow ... (A. Pushkin).

Forms of the past tense are formed from the stem of the infinitive with the help of a suffix -l-, followed by an ending with the value of the number and in units. number - kind: sang, sang, sang, sang.

Some verbs have a suffix -l- absent in the masculine form: carried, rubbed, grew, shore, froze and etc.

Past verb tense go is formed from another stem, different from the stem of the indefinite form: go- walked, walked, walked, walked.

The form future tense indicates that the action will take place after the moment of speech: The cold will come, the sheets will crumble- and will be ice- water (G. Ivanov).

Imperfective verbs and perfective verbs also have forms of the future tense, but they are formed in different ways.

Shapes of the future tenses of verbs perfect form are formed from the basis of the simple future tense using the same endings as the forms of the present tenses of verbs imperfect form (such a form is called a form simple future tense): I will write, I will tell, I will bring.

Shapes of the future tenses of verbs imperfect form are formed by joining forms will be, will be, will be, will be, will be, will be to the infinitive of the imperfective verb (this form is called the form complex future tense): I will write, I will tell, I will bear.

The forms of time can be used not only in their basic meaning, but also in a figurative meaning, characteristic of the forms of other times.

Present tense forms can denote an action preceding the moment of speech (the use of present tense forms in a story about the past is called real historical): Just, you know, going out from the world, look- my horses stand quietly around Ivan Mikhailovich (I. Bunin).

Present tense forms can also denote an action following the moment of speech (the value of the future tense): I have everything ready, I'm in the afternoon send things. Baron and I tomorrow getting married tomorrow we are leaving to the brick factory, and the day after tomorrow I'm already at school, starts new life (A. Chekhov).

Forms of the past tense can be used in the meaning of the future tense: Run, run! Otherwise I dead (K. Fedin).

Forms of the future tense can have the meaning of the past tense: Gerasim looked, looked, but suddenly laughed (I. Turgenev).

Person, number and gender of the verb

Forms faces of the verb express the relation of the action indicated by the verb to the speaking person.

There are three faces of verbs: first, second and third.

The form first faces the only numbers denotes the action of the speaker: sing, I'll go.

The form first faces plural numbers denotes the action of a group of persons, which includes the speaker: let's go, let's go.

The form second faces singular indicates the action of the interlocutor: sing, go.

The form second faces plural denotes the action of a group of persons, which includes the interlocutor: sing, come in.

Forms third faces singular and plural designate the actions of one or those who do not participate in the dialogue, i.e. is not a speaker or interlocutor: sing, come in, sing, come in.

Category faces and numbers Verbs have only in the present and future tense of the indicative mood and in the imperative mood. Verbs in the past tense and in the conditional mood do not have a category faces, but change according to numbers and childbirth:(I, you, he) led \ \ - male genus, (I, you, she) led- female genus, (I, you, it) led-\o\- average genus, (we you they) led-\and\- plural number.

Not all Russian verbs have a complete set of personal forms.

In Russian there are so-called inadequate and redundant Verbs.

Insufficient verbs do not have a complete set of forms for one reason or another. Some verbs do not have the 1st form faces units numbers, as they are difficult to pronunciation:win, convince, convince, dissuade, find oneself, feel, eclipse, dare etc. In cases where it is still necessary to use the form of the 1st faces of these verbs resort to a descriptive method; I must win, I want to convince, I can find myself.

A number of verbs do not use the forms of the 1st and 2nd faces singular and plural numbers for semantic reasons (these verbs refer to processes occurring in nature or in the animal world): to calve, to whelp, to rust, to glimmer, to turn white, to brighten, to be distributed(about sound) flare up etc.

In modern Russian, the opposite phenomenon also takes place, when for some verbs the formation of forms faces present (or simple future) time goes in two different ways: splash- splatter / splatter, drip- drip / drip, splash- splash / splash, poke- poke / poke, wave- waving / waving and etc.

Impersonal verbs

Impersonal verbs - these are verbs that name actions or states that occur as if by themselves, without the participation of the actor: shiver, vomit, be unwell, get light, dawn, get colder, evening, dusk etc. They denote the state of man or nature.

These verbs do not change by person and do not combine with personal pronouns. They are used as predicates of impersonal sentences, and the subject with them is impossible.

Impersonal verbs have only the infinitive form (shine, shiver) 3rd person singular form (light, chill) and the neuter singular form (light, shivering).

Group impersonal verbs replenished with personal verbs by adding a postfix to them -sya: can't read, can't sleep, can't believe, easily breathe, live etc.

Quite often, personal verbs are used in the meaning of impersonal ones. Wed: Lilac smells(personal verb) good o and smells(personal verb in impersonal meaning) hay over meadows (A. Maikov); The wind bends the trees to the ground and makes me sleepy; Something dark in the distance and It gets dark early in winter.

Morphological analysis of the verb includes the selection of four permanent features (kind, recurrence, transitivity, conjugation) and five non-permanent ones (mood, tense, person, number, gender). The number of permanent features of the verb can be increased by including features such as the class of the verb, as well as the type of the stem.

Scheme of morphological parsing of the verb.

I. Part of speech.

1. Initial form (indefinite form).

2. Permanent signs:

2) recurrence;

3) transitivity-intransitivity;

4) conjugation.

3. Non-permanent signs:

1) inclination;

2) time (if any);

3) person (if any);

5) gender (if any).

III. syntax function. Listen carefully, standing in a forest or among an awakened flowering field ... (I. Sokolov-Mikitov)

An example of the morphological analysis of the verb.

I. Heed- verb, denotes an action: (what do you do?) listen.

II. Morphological features.

1. The initial form is to listen.

2. Permanent signs:

1) perfect look;

2) returnable;

3) intransitive;

4) I conjugation.

3. Non-permanent signs:
1) imperative mood;

3) 2nd person;

4) plural;

III. In a sentence, it is a simple verbal predicate.

The verb is an extremely interesting part of speech, reflecting the whole variety of actions, states, relationships that exist in our world.

Due to the variety of forms and grammatical features, the verb is quite difficult to learn. However, having carefully and thoughtfully studied the morphology of the verb, you will learn how to solve the problems that this “cunning” part of speech poses.

A verb is a part of speech that denotes an action or state of an object.

In Russian, a verb can be any member of a sentence, although most often it acts as a predicate.

The verb has a number of grammatical features. Verbs are either perfective or imperfective and can be transitive or intransitive. Verbs can be used in the indicative, conditional and imperative moods.

In the past tense, verbs change by gender. In the indicative mood, verbs change in tense, that is, they can be present, future and past tense. Verbs are conjugated, that is, they change in person and number.

The verb answers the questions “What to do?”, “What to do?”, “What is he doing?”, “What will he do?”, “What will he do?”, “What did he do?”, “What did he do?”

Verbs are an extremely numerous, diverse, grammatically interesting group of words. About a third of the total vocabulary of our language is verbs. And this is not surprising, because verbs denote the whole range of possible actions, states, relationships. Sit, see, work, read, know, consist, intend are all verbs.

In Russian, there are two verbal forms - participles and participles. These forms retain some features of the verb and. at the same time, they acquire signs of another part of speech.

Participles ( who has come, seen enough, reading, sleeping, led ) are similar in some ways to adjectives. Participles ( looking, sitting, eating ) - with adverbs.

There are two types of verbs: perfect and imperfect. The grammatical category of the form reflects the nature of the course of the action, its relation to the result.

Perfective verbs answer the question "What to do?". They denote an action that has completed ( read, come ), will start at a certain moment ( sing ), will happen at once ( push, move ).

Imperfective verbs denote an action extended in time, long, repetitive ( read, ride, sing ).

Perfective and imperfective verbs form aspect pairs. These are words that are similar or identical in lexical meaning and differ in appearance, as well as in the composition of the word. For example:

Some aspectual pairs differ only in stress:

Cut-cut, scatter-scatter

Or do they have different roots:

Take-take, search-find.


There are also such “cunning” verbs in our language that sound and are spelled exactly the same in their perfect and imperfect form. For example: command, punish, injure .

Verbs are conjugated, that is, they change in person and number. Groups into which all verbs of the Russian language are divided are also called conjugation. Verbs belonging to the same conjugation are conjugated in the same way, that is, they have the same endings in a certain form. There are two conjugations - I and II.

Verbs first conjugation have the following personal endings:

1 person -y | -eat

2 person -eat | -et

3 person -et | -ut (-ut)

Verbs second conjugation have other endings:

Singular | Plural

1 person -y | -them

2 person -ish | -ite

3 person -it | -at(-yat)

If the stress falls on the ending, it is not difficult to determine the conjugation and write the word correctly. But in most verbs, other syllables are stressed, so you have to memorize the rule for determining conjugation.

The second conjugation includes:

All verbs in –it , Besides shave, shave ;

7 exception verbs on –et (watch, see, offend, hate, depend, endure, twirl ) and 4 verbs in –at (drive, hold, hear, breathe ).

All other verbs belong to the first conjugation.


There is a small group of heterogeneous verbs: want, run, honor, glimpse . These words are conjugated now according to the first, then according to the second conjugation in different forms.

Group number 3. A mistake was made in the definition of the verb. Find and explain it. Verbs that denote actions that occur on their own, without a protagonist, are called impersonal. In a sentence with impersonal verbs, the subject comes after the predicate. Find the verb by its morphological features: perfective, intransitive, in the past tense, in the singular.

Slide 9 from the presentation "Verb Repetition". The size of the archive with the presentation is 150 KB.

Russian language grade 6

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A verb is an independent part of speech that denotes an action or state of an object and answers the questions what to do? what to do?

The initial form of a verb is called the infinitive. The infinitive is an invariable form of the verb that answers the questions what to do? what to do? (write, write).

Infinitives can end in -т9 -ти, -ч.

A constant feature of the verb is the aspect. Perfective verbs (what to do? say) indicate the completion of the action, its end or result, imperfective (what to do? say) do not indicate the completion of the action.

Verbs with the suffix -sya (-съ) are called reflexive (learn). The suffix -sya (-s) differs from other suffixes in that it comes after all morphemes, it is called a postfix.

Transitive verbs are combined with a noun or pronoun in V. p. without a preposition (to love (what?) fruit). A noun or pronoun with a transitive verb can also be in R. p .:

If the verb has a negation (negative particle NOT): did not read books;

If the action does not pass to the whole object, but only to its part: did you drink what? water.

Verbs are called intransitive if the action does not directly transfer to another object: skiing. Reflexive verbs are always intransitive (to go uphill).

Verb conjugation is the change of the verb in persons and numbers. There are 2 conjugations in Russian.

In order to determine the conjugation of a verb with an unstressed personal ending, you need to put it in an indefinite form and determine which vowel comes before -t.

The II conjugation with unstressed personal endings includes:

Everything is on -IT, except for shaving, laying, building up;

7 on -ET: look, see, hate, endure, twirl, offend, depend;

4 on -AT: hear, breathe, drive, hold.

All other verbs belong to the I conjugation.

Verbs that have endings of different conjugations are called multi-conjugated, there are 4 of them in Russian: want, eat, give, run.


verb mood


Verbs in the indicative mood denote actions that have taken place, are taking place or will actually take place: I spoke, I speak, I will speak.

Conditional verbs denote actions that are desired or possible under certain conditions. They are formed from the base of the initial form of the verb with the help of the suffix -l and the particle by (b), which can be before the verb, after it, or separated from the verb in other words: would write.

Verbs in the imperative mood express an impulse to action, an order, a request: do it, write it down.

In the indicative mood, imperfective verbs have 3 tenses: present, past and future. Perfective verbs - 2: past and future.

Verbs in the present tense denote an action that is happening at the moment of speaking, as well as permanent and long-term actions: I am writing a letter.

The past tense of the verb is formed from the stem of the infinitive with the suffix -l or without the suffix: bought, carried. It means that the action took place before the moment of speech.

The future tense can be simple or complex. The form of the future simple is perfect verbs (write), the form of the future complex is imperfect verbs. They consist of T! words: future simple from the verb to be and infinitive: I will write.

In the present and future tenses, verbs change according to persons (I speak, I speak, I speak) and numbers (I speak, I speak).

Verbs that denote actions performed without a protagonist are called impersonal: it froze, it gets dark. Personal verbs can be used in an impersonal sense: A fine rain is falling. - It's dripping on the street.

Past tense verbs change by number (painted, painted) and gender (drawn, painted). The gender of the verb is determined by the ending (m. R. -

zero ending: wrote; and. r.---------- a: wrote; average

genus ------- o: buzzed).

The verb is perhaps the most used unit of our native language. It is found in texts written in an artistic, scientific, journalistic style, in colloquial and literary genres.

In this article you will find answers to the questions: “How is the verb characterized?”, “What does it mean?”

Verb

It is an independent representative of our beautiful language. It performs two main tasks:

  1. Talks about an action performed by an object, person, phenomenon. For example: ran, jumped, peers, stands, is, eats.
  2. It characterizes the state, property, sign, relation of the object. Consider an example: I get sick, blush, envy.

You can recognize a verb in a sentence by asking it the question “what to do?” or one of its forms ("what am I doing?", "what did I do?", etc.).

Verb forms

All verbs are conditionally divided into four categories:

  1. Initial, it is also an infinitive. It is formed from the stem of the word by suffixing with "t", "ti", "ch". This form does not change according to persons, genders and numbers. Lets you know what action is being taken. Able to act in a proposal in any role. It has features of transition and recurrence. It can be characterized as a perfective or imperfective verb. Examples: lose heart, be sad, dig, learn, view, love.
  2. Conjugated forms. This group can include any changeable having permanent and non-permanent features.
  3. Participle - in modern Russian grammar, this is a special form of the verb. The task of this part of speech is to characterize the attribute of an object by action.
  4. The participle is, according to one version, an invariable verb form. Some linguists distinguish it as a separate one. In the sentence, it denotes an additional, clarifying action.

Verb type

Consider the first constant feature that characterizes the verb. What does the word "view" mean in relation to this part of speech?

All verbs can be divided into two large groups: perfective (CB) and imperfective (NSV).

You can find out what type a word belongs to by asking a question to its infinitive. If the verb answers the question "what to do?" is the perfect look. If the question "what to do?" - imperfect.

Perfective verbs characterize an action that has reached its logical conclusion. Words from the imperfective group denote a process that is still ongoing.

The perfect form of the verb in most cases is achieved using the prefix method.

Verb tenses

In our native language, there are verbs of the past tense, future and present. Any of them is easily recognized in the context with knowledge of the theoretical material.

Past tense verbs describe an action that ended before the beginning of speaking. It should be borne in mind that the time in which the story takes place is not always expressed in the present. You may encounter an option where the future or past tense will meet. For example: "I told my mother that I went to the cinema" - or: "He will say that he successfully completed the task."

Words belonging to the past tense change by gender, number. They are created by adding "l" to the base of the initial form.

The present tense of the verb occurs only in imperfective words. It is expressed with the help of a personal ending. Describes the action taking place at the moment of speaking. It can also perform the following roles:

  1. Describes an action that is constantly repeated. For example: "The mouth of the river flows into the sea."
  2. Talks about an action that happens regularly. For example: "Every Friday at six o'clock she goes to the dance."
  3. Talks about an event that could potentially happen: "Some guys are rude."

The future form of the verb tells about an event that will happen only after the moment of speech comes to an end. It can be represented by both perfective and imperfective verbs.

There are two forms of the future tense: simple and compound. The first is formed with a verb. The second - by adding to the main word forms of the lexeme "to be" (I will, will be, will be, etc.).

Certain verbs of one tense can be used in the meaning of another. For example, it may have the meaning of the present in the context: “Here she is forever like this: she didn’t see anything, she didn’t hear anything.”

Time is considered to be a non-permanent feature.

verb mood

Mood is another inconstant feature of the verb. It expresses the relation of this part of speech to reality. It is divided into three types: indicative, subjunctive, imperative. Each of them has a number of characteristic features.

Indicative verbs represent an actual action taking place in the past, present or future. This is the distinguishing feature. Words belonging to other moods cannot be expressed in any tense.

Imperative verbs are able to convey a request, order, wish, advice. They are formed in two ways: using the suffix "and" or through zero suffixation. In the plural, the ending "those" appears. Words do not change over time.

Subjunctive verbs describe an action that could be realized under a certain set of circumstances. This inclination is formed by adding to the word in the past tense, the particle "by".

Verb: what does the word "conjugation" mean in relation to it?

Conjugation is a constant feature. Its essence lies in changing the verb in persons and numbers. There are only two types of conjugation, which are usually denoted by Roman numerals I and II.

Finding out to which conjugation a word can be attributed is quite simple if you remember simple facts:

  1. If the ending of the verb is stressed, then the conjugation of the word is determined by this form. If it is in an unstressed position - by infinitive.
  2. Verbs that can be defined in the group of the first conjugation are characterized by the endings "eat", "eat", "eat", "eat", "ut", "yut". Related to the second conjugation - “ish”, “it”, “im”, “ite”, “at” or “yat”.
  3. There is a group of forms which, when changed, have part of the endings of one group, part of another. These are the verbs "to want" and "to run".

In this article, we looked at the verb (what this part of speech means). We got acquainted with some of its permanent and non-permanent features, gave examples. In the future, it will not be difficult for you to identify the verb in the text and give it a brief description if necessary.

The meaning of the verb, its morphological features and syntactic function

Verb is an independent part of speech that denotes an action, state or attitude and answers questions what to do? what to do?: work, clean, get sick, be afraid, desire, consist. All forms verb have morphological features of the species (there are perfect or imperfect species) and transitivity (they are transitional or intransitive). Among the verb forms there are conjugated(change in moods, tenses, persons or genders, as well as numbers) and non-conjugated(initial form verb, participles and participles).

In a sentence, conjugated verb forms play the role of a predicate (they have special forms of predicate - forms of mood and time), non-conjugated verb forms can be other members of the sentence. For example: Mermaid floated along the blue river, illuminated by the full moon ... (M. Lermontov); So thought young rake, flying in the dust on the mail... (A. Pushkin).

Infinitive

The initial (dictionary) form of the verb is infinitive, or infinitive(from lat. infiniti - vus - "indefinite"). The infinitive denotes an action regardless of mood, time, person, number, that is, without its connection with the agent (subject).

The infinitive is an invariable form of the verb, which has only constant morphological features of the verb: aspect, transitivity / intransitivity, reflexivity / irreversibility, type of conjugation. (If in conjugated verb forms the ending is unstressed, then the type of conjugation is determined by the infinitive.)

The formal indicators of the infinitive are suffixes -ty, -ty(at school they are usually treated as graduations). Suffix -th comes after vowels (follow, think, sing) a -ti- after consonants (carry, carry, weave). Some verbs end in the infinitive with -ch: oven, cherish, flow, be able and etc.; historically in -whose merged infinitive -ti and final root sound [G] or [to]: type forms "pekti", "protect" as a result of phonetic changes, they were transformed into "bake", "save" etc.

In a sentence, the infinitive can be any part of the sentence. For example: 1) Be in love others - a heavy cross ... (B. Pasternak); 2) He [Startsev] decided to go to the Turkins(for what purpose?) see what kind of people they are (A. Chekhov); 3) I acted carelessly, indulging in the sweet habit of seeing and hearing you every day (A. Pushkin); 4) The cleanest shirts orders put on the captain!_ (B. Okudzhava).

Note. Example (2) - with verbs of motion (leave, go etc.) or cessation of movement (stop, stay, sit down etc.) the infinitive is a circumstance of the goal (names the goal of movement or cessation of movement): Sometimes in the sands he stopped(for what purpose?) relax (K. Paustovsky).

Example (4) - the infinitive is not included in the predicate and is an addition in the sentence if it denotes the action of another person (object), not the one called the subject.

Verb stems

The verb has two basics: stem of the infinitive and basis of the present/simple future tense.(Sometimes it also stands out basis of past tense but for most verbs it coincides with the stem of the infinitive.) Part of the verb forms is formed from basics infinitive, and the other part - from basics present/simple future tense. These two basics many verbs are different.

To highlight the stem of the infinitive, you need to separate the formative suffix of the infinitive: carried- you, piss- t, speak- th, read- uh, rice- th.

To highlight the basis of the present / simple future tense, it is necessary to separate the personal ending from the form of the present / simple future tense (usually the form of the 3rd person plural is taken): carried- ut, write- uh, talk- yat, chita j - ut, pucyj - ut.

To highlight basis past tense, you need to discard the formative suffix -l- and the ending from the past tense form (you can use any form except the masculine singular form, since it can contain a zero suffix, which makes it difficult to select basics): carried- l-a, piss- l-a, speak- l-a, read- l-a, rice a- l-a.

There are verbs that have the same basics the infinitive and the present/simple future tense, and the basis of the past tense differs from them: id- ti, id- ut, sh- l-a. basics different: get wet- th, wet- ut, wet- l-a; tere- t, tr- ut, ter- l-a. There are verbs that have all three basics match: carried- you, carried- ut, carried- la.

Verb forms that are formed from the stem of the infinitive

Verb forms that are formed from the basis of the present / simple future tense

1. Forms of the past tense of the indicative mood: carried-l-a, wrote-l-a, spoke, read, drew-a.

1. Forms of the present and the simple future tense of the indicative mood: I carry, write, I say, 4 umaj- y (spelling - read) pucyj- y(drawing).

2. Forms of the conditional mood: would carry, would write, would speak, would read, would draw.

2. Forms of the imperative mood: carry, write, speak, read) (read), drawing) (draw).

3. Real past participles: carried, wrote, spoke, read, drew.

3. Real participles of the present tense: carrier, write-ouch-th, speaking, chita j-ug-th (reading),pucyj-ug-th (drawing).

4. Passive past participles: carried away, written, drawn-nn-yp.

4. Passive participles of the present tense: carried-ohm-th, talk-i.ch-th, chitauem-th (readable), pucyj-um-th (drawable).

5. Perfect participles: writing, speaking, reading, drawing.

5. Imperfect participles: nes-i, saying, read" ja (reading)pucyj- a(drawing).

Verb type

Verbs in Russian belong to one of two types: to imperfect or to perfect.

Verbs perfect look answer the question what to do? and denote an action limited in its duration, having an internal limit, completeness. Perfect verbs can denote an action that has ended (or will end) by achieving a result (learn, draw) an action that has begun (or will begin), and this very beginning of the action is understood as its border, limit (play, sing) single action (push, shout, jump- verbs with suffix -well).

Verbs imperfect form answer the question what to do? and indicate an action without specifying

to its limit, without limiting its course in time, the action is long or repeated (learn, draw, play, shout).

Imperfect and perfect verbs form species pairs. The species pair is imperfective verb and a perfective verb that have the same lexical meaning and differ only in meaning kind: read- read, write - write, build- build.

Imperfect verbs formed from perfective verbs with suffixes:

1) -iva-, -iva-: consider- consider, ask- ask, subscribe- sign;

2) -wa: open- open, give- give, put on- put on shoes;

3) -a-(-z): save- save, rise- grow up.

Perfective verbs are formed from imperfective verbs in various ways:

1) using view attachments on-, off-, pro-, you-, on- and etc,: treat- cure, oven- bake, make- do, write - write, read- read, build- build, teach- learn etc. (But more often, with the help of a prefix, perfective verbs are formed, which differ from imperfective verbs not only in the meaning of the aspect, but also in a change in lexical meaning; such verbs do not form a specific pair: read- reread, reread, reread etc.);

2) using a suffix -uh-: get used to- get used to, nod- nod, jump- jump.

Some verbs that make up the aspect pair may differ only in the place of stress: scatter- sprinkle, cut- slice.

Separate aspectual pairs make up verbs with different roots: talk- say, search- find, put- put, take- take.

Some verbs are single-species. They do not form a species pair and are either only perfect look (find yourself, rush, sleep, scream etc.), or only imperfect form (predominate, be present, sit, be).

There are also two-species verbs that combine in one form the meaning with perfect and imperfect. Their appearance is set from the context: marry, execute, injure, command, as well as verbs with suffixes -ova (t), -irova (t): influence, use, automate, pave, telegraph etc. For example: The guns from the pier are firing, the ship is ordered to land (what are they doing?) (A. Pushkin); Would you like me to order (what will I do?) to bring a rug? (N. Gogol).

Verb type influences the formation of its forms (first of all, the forms of time): imperfective verbs in the indicative mood there are forms of all three tenses (moreover, in the future tense they have a complex form) and a full set of temporary forms of participles; at perfective verbs there are no forms of the present tense in the indicative mood (the form of the future tense is simple) and participles of the present tense.

Verbs transitive and intransitive

Differ transitive and intransitive verbs.

transitional Verbs denote an action that is directly directed at an object. They may carry a direct object in the accusative case without a preposition, answering the question whom?"/What?", write an article, knit a sweater, sing a song.

Instead of the accusative case, the object with a transitive verb can also be in the genitive case without a preposition:

1) if there is a negative particle not before a transitive verb: understood the task- did not understand the task; read a novel- did not read the novel; waste time- do not waste time;

2) if the action does not transfer to the whole object, but only to its part: drank water(all the water in question) - drank some water(part), fetch firewood- bring firewood.

When determining transitivity / intransitivity of verbs it is necessary to take into account the meaning of the noun in the form of the accusative case - it must name the object of the action. Wed: stand for an hour (in line) or live for a week (at sea), where the verbs are not transitive, although after them there are nouns in the accusative case without a preposition: All night long(vp with time value, not object) thundered(verb intransitive) a neighboring ravine, a stream, bubbling, ran to the stream (A. Fet).

Verbs that cannot carry a direct object are intransitive: engage(how?) sports, understanding(in what?) in music, refuse(from what?) from help.

Note. Transitivity / intransitivity closely related to the lexical meaning of the verb: in one meaning the verb can be transitive, and in the other intransitive. Wed: I'm telling the truth (I'm telling the truth“I say” is a transitive verb). The child is already talking- "talks" - intransitive verb); Tomorrow I will go alone, I will teach(intransitive verb) at school and I will give my whole life to those who may need it (A. Chekhov); learn lessons(transitive verb).

Reflexive verbs

To reflexive verbs include verbs with a postfix -sya, -ss. All reflexive verbs are intransitive. They are formed as from transitive verbs (distinguish - differ, please- rejoice, dress- dress), and from intransitive (knock- knock, blacken- blacken). From ordinary derivational suffixes -sya differs in that it is attached to verb forms after the endings (knocking, knocking). Suffix -sya added after consonants -ss- after vowels (studied- studied); in participle forms and after vowels is added -sya, and not -s: different - different.

Joining transitive verbs, suffix -sya turns them into intransitives: wears whom? / what?- gets dressed. Joining intransitive verbs -sya reinforces the meaning of intransitivity: turns white- turns white.

Suffix -sya also serves to form impersonal forms from personal verbs: I am not sleeping- I can't sleep, I want- I would like to.

Among verbs with the suffix -sya there are also those that do not have parallel forms without this suffix: laugh, hope, bow, fight and etc.

Verb conjugations

Conjugation - this is a change of the verb in persons and numbers. (Term conjugated forms verb is used in a broader sense than the term conjugation . The conjugated forms of the verb include all forms, except for the infinitive, participles and participles, i.e. forms of all moods.)

Depending on personal endings in Russian, it is customary to distinguish two conjugations - I and II, which differ from each other in vowels in the endings: carry, sing, speak, be silent, carry, sing, speak, be silent, carry, sing, speak, be silent, carry, sing, speak, be silent, carry, sing, speak, be silent

I conjugation

II conjugation

If the ending is percussive, conjugation determined at the end: you call, you lead I conjugation, burn, sleep-II conjugation.

But most of the verbs conjugation has no accent on personal endings. In such cases conjugation determined by the infinitive (by the vowel that comes before the infinitive suffix).

Co II conjugation include those verbs with an unstressed personal ending, in which 1) the infinitive ends in -i-t (carry, cut, spend etc.), except for verbs shave, lay, rare verbs be based(“to build, to build”) and be ruffled("to vacillate, to sway, to swell"). (Verbs be based and be ruffled are used only in the form of 3 person units. and plural. numbers, other forms are not used.); 2) exception verbs whose infinitive ends in -e-t (look, see, hate, offend, depend, endure, twirl) and on -a-be (drive, hold, hear, breathe).

All other verbs with unstressed personal endings belong to I conjugation.

It should be remembered that prefixed verbs formed from non-prefixed ones are of the same type conjugations, which is unprefixed (drive- catch up- overtake- expel etc. - II conjugation). Verbs with -sya (-sya) belong to the same type of conjugation as without -sya (s) (drive- chase-II conjugation).

There are also heterogeneous verbs in the Russian language, in which one form is formed according to I conjugation, and others - according to II. These include: 1) to want- in the singular changes according to I conjugation (want- want- wants), and in the plural - according to II (want- want to- want); 2) run, which has all forms, as in verbs of II conjugation (running- running- running- run- run), except 3rd person plural. numbers - run(according to I conjugation); 3) honor- changes according to II conjugation (revere- honors- honor- honor), except 3rd person plural. numbers (revere) although there is a form honor, which is now used less frequently than honor; 4) glimpse(“to dawn, to glow a little”) - is used only in the form of the 3rd person singular (snaps-II conjugation) and plural (squeamish- I conjugation): Dawn breaks a little; The stars twinkle faintly in the sky.

Uncharacteristic for verbs I and II conjugations verbs have an ending system (archaic) eat, get bored, give, create(and their prefix derivatives: overeat, overeat, surrender, give away, betray, recreate and etc.).

eat eat

ladies give give give

eat eat eat

give dad-they will give

Verb to be also idiosyncratic. Rarely used forms of the 3rd person singular have survived from it in modern Russian. and plural. present tense numbers there is and essence: A straight line is the shortest distance between two points; The most common abstractions accepted by almost all historians are: freedom, equality, enlightenment, progress, civilization, culture (L. Tolstoy), and the future tense is formed from another root: will- you will- will be- we will- you will- will.

It should be remembered that verbs are conjugated (change in persons and numbers) only in the present and simple future tenses. If the form of the future is complex (in imperfective verbs), then only the auxiliary verb is conjugated to be, and the main verb is taken in the infinitive. Verbs in the past tense do not conjugate (do not change by person).

verb mood

Verbs change according to moods. The form inclinations shows how the action relates to reality: whether the action is real (taking place in reality), or unreal (desired, required, possible under certain conditions).

In Russian, verbs have forms of three moods: indicative, conditional (subjunctive) and imperative.

Verbs in indicative mood denote a real action that is happening, has happened or will actually happen in a certain time (present, past or future). Verbs in the indicative mood change over time: doing(present tense) was engaged(past tense), I will study(future time).

Verbs in conditional mood do not denote real actions, but desired, possible ones. Conditional mood forms are formed from the stem of the infinitive (or the stem of the past tense) with the help of the suffix -l-(followed by an ending with the meaning of number and, in the singular, gender) and particles would (b)(which can be before the verb, after it, or can be torn off from it). For example: If I were a poet, I would live like a goldfinch and would not whistle in a cage, but on a branch at dawn (Y. Moritz).

AT conditional verbs change according to numbers and gender (in this mood there is no time and person): would pass, would pass, would pass, would pass.

Verbs in imperative mood denote an impulse to action (a request, an order), that is, they denote not a real action, but a required one. In the imperative mood verbs change in numbers and persons (there is also no time in this mood).

The most common forms are 2 person singular and plural, which express the motivation for action of the interlocutor (interlocutors).

Form 2 persons unit. number is formed from the basis of the present / simple future tense using the suffix -and- or without a suffix (in this case, the stem of the verb in the imperative mood is the same as the stem of the present/simple future tense): talk, look, write, hold, work(the basis of the present tense is pa6 omaj- ym), rest (rest) -ut), remember (rememberj-ut), cut (cut), get up (get up).

Form 2 persons pl. numbers are formed from the form of the 2nd person unit. numbers with ending -te: speak- \those\, hold- \those\, for-remember- \those\ and etc.

Forms 3 persons unit. and many others. the numbers express the motivation for action of one or those who are not participating in the dialogue. They are formed by particles let, let, yes + 3rd person forms or many indicative numbers: let it go, let it go, long live, long liveetc.: Yes they know the descendants of the Orthodox native land past fate (A. Pushkin).

Form 1 person pl. numbers expresses an impulse to joint action, of which the speaker himself is a participant. It is made up of particles. come on let's + infinitive of imperfective verbs (let's, let's + sing, dance, play) or 4- form of the 1st person pl. indicative mood numbers of perfective verbs (come on, let's + sing, dance, play): Let's talk complimenting each other... (B. Okudzhava); Let's drop words like a garden- amber and zest... (B. Pasternak); comrade life, let's faster stomp, stomp the rest of the five-year period ... (V. Mayakovsky).

Mood forms can be used not only in their direct meaning, but also in a figurative meaning, that is, in a meaning characteristic of another mood.

For example, the imperative mood form can; have the meanings of the conditional mood (1) and indicative (2): 1) Do not be for that, God's will, they would not give up Moscow (M. Lermontov);2) Since he told him tell:“I see, Azamat, that you really liked this horse” (M. Lermontov).

Verb in the indicative mood can be used as an imperative: However, it is already dark in the field; hurry up! went, went Andryushka! (A. Pushkin); The commandant walked around his army, telling the soldiers: “Well, kids, let's stand today for the mother empress and we will prove to the whole world that we are brave people and jurymen ”(A. Pushkin).

The form of the conditional mood can have the meaning of the imperative: papa, you would talk to Alexandra, she behaves desperately (M. Gorky).

verb tense

In the indicative mood, verbs change in tense. Forms of time express the relation of action to the moment of speech. In Russian, there are forms of three tenses: present, past and future. The number of tense forms and the way they are formed depends on the type of the verb. Imperfective verbs have three forms of tense, and their future form is complex. Perfective verbs have only two tense forms (they have no present tense), the future form is simple.

The form present time shows that the action coincides with the moment of speech or is carried out constantly, regularly repeated: On full steam rushing train, wheels twirls locomotive ... (B. Pasternak); Oh how deadly we are love, how in violent blindness of passions, we are most likely destroy, what is dear to our hearts! (F. Tyutchev).

Only imperfective verbs have present tense forms. They are formed with the help of endings that are attached to the basis of the present tense and indicate at the same time not only time, but also person and number. The set of endings depends on the conjugation.

The form past tense shows that the action precedes the moment of speech: We all learned little by little something and somehow ... (A. Pushkin).

Forms of the past tense are formed from the stem of the infinitive with the help of a suffix -l-, followed by an ending with the value of the number and in units. number - kind: sang, sang, sang, sang.

Some verbs have a suffix -l- absent in the masculine form: carried, rubbed, grew, shore, froze and etc.

Past verb tense go is formed from another stem, different from the stem of the indefinite form: go- walked, walked, walked, walked.

The form future tense indicates that the action will take place after the moment of speech: The cold will come, the sheets will crumble- and will be ice- water (G. Ivanov).

Imperfective verbs and perfective verbs also have forms of the future tense, but they are formed in different ways.

Shapes of the future tenses of verbs perfect form are formed from the basis of the simple future tense using the same endings as the forms of the present tenses of verbs imperfect form (such a form is called a form simple future tense): I will write, I will tell, I will bring.

Shapes of the future tenses of verbs imperfect form are formed by joining forms will be, will be, will be, will be, will be, will be to the infinitive of the imperfective verb (this form is called the form complex future tense): I will write, I will tell, I will bear.

The forms of time can be used not only in their basic meaning, but also in a figurative meaning, characteristic of the forms of other times.

Present tense forms can denote an action preceding the moment of speech (the use of present tense forms in a story about the past is called real historical): Just, you know, going out from the world, look- my horses stand quietly around Ivan Mikhailovich (I. Bunin).

Present tense forms can also denote an action following the moment of speech (the value of the future tense): I have everything ready, I'm in the afternoon send things. Baron and I tomorrow getting married tomorrow we are leaving to the brick factory, and the day after tomorrow I'm already at school, starts new life (A. Chekhov).

Forms of the past tense can be used in the meaning of the future tense: Run, run! Otherwise I dead (K. Fedin).

Forms of the future tense can have the meaning of the past tense: Gerasim looked, looked, but suddenly laughed (I. Turgenev).

Person, number and gender of the verb

Forms faces of the verb express the relation of the action indicated by the verb to the speaking person.

There are three faces of verbs: first, second and third.

The form first faces the only numbers denotes the action of the speaker: sing, I'll go.

The form first faces plural numbers denotes the action of a group of persons, which includes the speaker: let's go, let's go.

The form second faces singular indicates the action of the interlocutor: sing, go.

The form second faces plural denotes the action of a group of persons, which includes the interlocutor: sing, come in.

Forms third faces singular and plural designate the actions of one or those who do not participate in the dialogue, i.e. is not a speaker or interlocutor: sing, come in, sing, come in.

Category faces and numbers Verbs have only in the present and future tense of the indicative mood and in the imperative mood. Verbs in the past tense and in the conditional mood do not have a category faces, but change according to numbers and childbirth:(I, you, he) led \ \ - male genus, (I, you, she) led- female genus, (I, you, it) led-\o\- average genus, (we you they) led-\and\- plural number.

Not all Russian verbs have a complete set of personal forms.

In Russian there are so-called inadequate and redundant Verbs.

Insufficient verbs do not have a complete set of forms for one reason or another. Some verbs do not have the 1st form faces units numbers, as they are difficult to pronunciation:win, convince, convince, dissuade, find oneself, feel, eclipse, dare etc. In cases where it is still necessary to use the form of the 1st faces of these verbs resort to a descriptive method; I must win, I want to convince, I can find myself.

A number of verbs do not use the forms of the 1st and 2nd faces singular and plural numbers for semantic reasons (these verbs refer to processes occurring in nature or in the animal world): to calve, to whelp, to rust, to glimmer, to turn white, to brighten, to be distributed(about sound) flare up etc.

In modern Russian, the opposite phenomenon also takes place, when for some verbs the formation of forms faces present (or simple future) time goes in two different ways: splash- splatter / splatter, drip- drip / drip, splash- splash / splash, poke- poke / poke, wave- waving / waving and etc.

Impersonal verbs

Impersonal verbs - these are verbs that name actions or states that occur as if by themselves, without the participation of the actor: shiver, vomit, be unwell, get light, dawn, get colder, evening, dusk etc. They denote the state of man or nature.

These verbs do not change by person and do not combine with personal pronouns. They are used as predicates of impersonal sentences, and the subject with them is impossible.

Impersonal verbs have only the infinitive form (shine, shiver) 3rd person singular form (light, chill) and the neuter singular form (light, shivering).

Group impersonal verbs replenished with personal verbs by adding a postfix to them -sya: can't read, can't sleep, can't believe, easily breathe, live etc.

Quite often, personal verbs are used in the meaning of impersonal ones. Wed: Lilac smells(personal verb) good o and smells(personal verb in impersonal meaning) hay over meadows (A. Maikov); The wind bends the trees to the ground and makes me sleepy; Something dark in the distance and It gets dark early in winter.

Morphological analysis of the verb includes the selection of four permanent features (kind, recurrence, transitivity, conjugation) and five non-permanent ones (mood, tense, person, number, gender). The number of permanent features of the verb can be increased by including features such as the class of the verb, as well as the type of the stem.

Scheme of morphological parsing of the verb.

I. Part of speech.

1. Initial form (indefinite form).

2. Permanent signs:

2) recurrence;

3) transitivity-intransitivity;

4) conjugation.

3. Non-permanent signs:

1) inclination;

2) time (if any);

3) person (if any);

5) gender (if any).

III. syntax function. Listen carefully, standing in a forest or among an awakened flowering field ... (I. Sokolov-Mikitov)

An example of the morphological analysis of the verb.

I. Heed- verb, denotes an action: (what do you do?) listen.

II. Morphological features.

1. The initial form is to listen.

2. Permanent signs:

1) perfect look;

2) returnable;

3) intransitive;

4) I conjugation.

3. Non-permanent signs:
1) imperative mood;

3) 2nd person;

4) plural;

III. In a sentence, it is a simple verbal predicate.

Any action, process, relationship or state of an animate or inanimate object in Russian is expressed through a verb. In turn, this part of speech is represented by various forms. This article describes in detail what questions the verb answers, its features and examples are indicated.

What is a verb in Russian

In russian language verb is an independent part of speech denoting process, relation, action or state of a person, object or phenomenon.

The grammatical meaning of the verb is expressed: by the categories of aspect, conjugation, reflexivity, transitivity, mood, pledge, number, person, gender and tense. The verb as a part of speech is represented by several classes of forms:

  • conjugated forms (read, going);
  • infinitive (search);
  • participles (written, sparkling);
  • gerunds (by drawing).

What questions does the verb answer?

The verb answers questions "What to do?"(imperfect form), "What to do?"(perfect form). As part of sentences, verbs most often act as a predicate, however, constructions are used in Russian in which verbal forms are used as a subject, definition, circumstance or object.

Examples of verbs in a sentence:

In the morning we watched an interesting film.

In the center of the city there is a monument to the great poet, whom the guide told us about.

The teacher will ask this text at the next lesson.

Verbs underlined in green.

Peculiarities

The grammatical categories of voice, aspect, conjugation, reflexivity and transitivity are inherent in all verbs and verbal forms, while other categories depend on the speech situation in which the verb is used:

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  • Mood- inherent exclusively in conjugated verbs;
  • Number- not characteristic of the infinitive and participle;
  • Genus- inherent in the forms of the subjunctive mood, past tense verbs and participles;
  • Time- characteristic of the forms of the indicative mood;
  • Face- inherent in conjugated verbal forms of the indicative mood of the present and future tenses, as well as forms of the imperative mood.

A verb is a part of speech that denotes an action or state of an object.

During the night the weather became noisy, the river was agitated, and the torch burned out in the peasant's smoky hut. The children are asleep, the hostess is dozing, the husband is lying on the floor, the storm is blowing; suddenly he hears: someone is knocking on the window. (P.)

The words: knocking, howling, rustling, agitated, burned out, listening- indicate the actions of the subject. The words: sleeping, dozing, lying- indicate the state of the object. The verb answers the questions: /i>what does the object do? what is done with it? The student (what is he doing?) reads the story. The story (what is being done with it?) is read by the students.

Verb change.

A verb, denoting an action, can also indicate the time when the action is performed. The verb has three tenses: present, past and future.

I knock (present tense), knocked (past tense), I will knock, I will knock (future tense).

The verb has 3 persons (1st, 2nd, 3rd) and two numbers: singular and plural.

In the past tense, the verb has no special personal endings, and the person is expressed only by a personal pronoun.

For example: I knocked, you knocked, he knocked. In the past tense, the verb changes according to gender and number: brother knocked (masculine), sister knocked (feminine), something knocked (neuter), we knocked (myopic number).

Changing the verb according to persons, tenses and numbers is called conjugation.

Verbs can end with -sya or Verbs ending in t-cya (-s) are called recursive. after consonants and th used -sya, and after vowels -s: washes - washes, washed - washed, wash - wash, mine - wash, mine - wash, washed - washed.

The role of the verb in the sentence.

In a sentence, the verb is usually the predicate. The verb predicate denotes the action or state of the object that is the subject in this sentence, and agrees with the subject in number and person, and in the past tense - in number and gender.

We boldly rush to the enemy; after us, the red cavalry rushed into battle; the enemy hastily retreats.

We rush. Predicate rush agrees with the subject we in person and number.

The cavalry rushed off. Predicate rushed consistent with subject cavalry in gender and number.

Indefinite form or infinitive

The verb has a special form, which only names the action, in itself does not indicate either tense, or number, or person, and therefore is called the indefinite form, or infinitive; read, cherish, carry, come. The indefinite form of the verb answers the question: what to do? what to do?

The indefinite form of the verb ends in -ty, -ty: build, carry. There is a special group of verbs with an indefinite form in -who. For verbs in -whose stem in the present tense ends in G or to: I can-can, bake-bake, shore-protect. Here we find alternation G and to with sound h.

Letter b in an indefinite form is preserved in front of the particle -sya: build - build, protect - beware.

Note. The indefinite form of the verb is derived from the verbal noun. Therefore, she does not indicate the time and face. In our language, there are still several words that can be both nouns and verbs, for example: hot oven (n.), pies oven (vb.); big leak (n.), water stopped flowing (v.); old noble nobility (n.), I want to know a lot (v.).

Types of verbs.

Verbs can be imperfective and perfective.

1. Imperfect verbs show an unfinished action or a repetitive action: work, shout, sleep, buy, take, throw, drop in.

Imperfective verbs form the future tense by means of an auxiliary verb: i Will work.

Note. About verbs denoting only a repeated action, they say that they belong to the multiple type if there is a verb with a long meaning nearby: read (when reading), walk (poi walk), sit (when sitting).

2. Perfective verbs show the completeness of the action: buy, take, bring, leave, read, write.

Perfective verbs cannot have the present tense; the form of the present tense has for them the meaning of the future: I will buy, I will take, I will start, I will bring, I will leave, I will read, I will write, I will speak.

Note. About perfective verbs, which denote an action that happened only once, they say that they refer to the one-time aspect. These are especially the verbs with the suffix -way, which keep it in the past tense: jump when jumping (cf. jumped), spit, when spitting (cf. spat), shout at shouting (cf. shouted).

The formation of verb types.

Most simple verbs are imperfective: carry, write, work. However, give, lie down, sit down, become, child, and a number of verbs ~it: buy, quit, finish, let go, forgive, decide, captivate, deprive, etc. will be perfect.

Note. Some simple verbs have both perfective and imperfective meanings: hurt, marry

This includes many verbs -to and -ovate: telegraph, organize, attack.

Compound verbs with prefixes in the vast majority of cases refer to the perfect form: bring, leave, read, sign, speak, sketch, throw. However, verbs are compound, formed from verbs carry, drive, carry, walk, run, fly, will be mostly imperfect. For example: bring, take away, bring in, enter, leave, etc.; take out, take out, take out, go out (but in & wear, take out, go out etc. will be perfect); to bring in, to demolish (but to bring in a shirt, to demolish boots, etc. will be perfect).

I. From almost every perfective verb, you can form an imperfective verb with the same meaning: give-give, start - start, bring - bring, etc.

The main way of forming imperfective verbs from the corresponding perfective verbs is the suffix -yva or -two, and often the root o alternates with a, and the final root consonant in a number of verbs alternates according to: read-read, lubricate - lubricate, sign - sign, rise - rise, jump - bounce, push - push out, smooth - smooth, hang - hang, freeze - freeze, ask - ask, dung - manure, sip - snuggle, feed - to feed, accumulate - accumulate etc.

Another way to form imperfective verbs is to change the suffix -and- to suffix -I-(or -a- after hissing) with the same changes in the final root consonants as in the previous case: meet - meet, peel - peel, generate - generate, illuminate - illuminate, arrange - design, get ahead - get ahead, load - load, finish, finish, decide, decide, surround - surround etc.

The third way to form imperfective verbs is the suffix -a-, and the root e or I (a after hissing) often alternates with and: erase - erase, die - die, subtract - subtract, light - light, hush - hush, start - start.

2. The fourth way to form imperfective verbs is the suffix -va-, used when the root of the verb ends in a vowel: break-break, ripen-ripen, give (ladies) - give (give), find out (learn) - learn (learn).

Notes.

  • 1. In some cases, a completely different verb serves as an imperfect aspect to a perfect aspect verb: take - take, say - speak, buy - buy, put - put, etc.
  • 2. For some verbs, the imperfective aspect differs from the perfective aspect only in the place of stress: scatter (scatter) - scatter (scatter): cut (cut) - cut (cut); know (know) - know (know)

II. From simple verbs of the imperfective form, the perfective form is formed either by means of the suffix -well-(one-time verbs): jump - jump, shout - shout etc. or through the so-called "empty" prefixes that do not change the basic meaning of the word: o- (ob-), po-, s-, on-, etc.: to grow stronger - to get stronger, to please - to please, to destroy - to destroy, to do - to do, to write - to write, etc.

However, from most simple verbs of the imperfective form, the perfective form is not formed: bite, sit, sleep, lie down etc. This also includes verbs greet, attend, attend and some others.

The alternation of vowels in the formation of species.

Sometimes the formation of species is associated with the alternation of vowels in the root: die - die, lock up - lock up, throw away - throw away, ignite - ignite.

Table of alternation of vowels in the roots of the verb in the formation of species.

Verb tenses.

The present tense of the verb means that the action takes place simultaneously with the moment of speech, that is, when it is spoken about.

1. The wind walks on the sea and the boat drives. He runs himself in the waves on swollen sails. (P.) 2. And the caravans of ships sail under the scarlet flag from the midday seas along the concrete canal.

The present tense is also used to denote an action that is performed constantly, always. 1 The plant reaches for the light source. 2. A person breathes with lungs. 3. The northern shores of the USSR are washed by the waters of the Arctic Ocean.

The past tense means that the action happened before the moment of speaking. They defeated the chieftains, dispersed the governor, and in the Pacific Ocean they finished their campaign.

The future tense means that the action will take place after the moment of speaking. 1. And if the enemy wants to take away our living joy in a stubborn battle, then we will sing a battle song and stand with our chest for our Motherland. 2. We beat the enemies of the Soviet regime, we beat and we will beat.

Two stems of the verb.

There are two stems in the verb: the stem of the indefinite form and the stem of the present tense.

To highlight the basis of the indefinite form, it is necessary to discard the suffix from the verb of the indefinite form -ty, -ty, for example: write-ty carry.

The basis of the present tense is distinguished if the personal ending is discarded from the verb of the present tense or the future simple, for example: write-ut, carry-ut, say-ut.

All verb forms are formed from these two stems.

Changing verbs for persons and numbers.

Verbs in the present and future tense change in person and number.

The first person of the verb shows that the action is performed by the speaker himself: I work, I read, I study.

The second person of the verb shows that the action is performed by the one to whom the speaker is speaking: you work, you read, you study.

The third person of the verb shows that the action is performed by the one they are talking about: he, she works, reads, studies.

In the plural, all these forms show that the action refers to several persons: work (we), work (you), work (they).

Present tense.

Personal endings.

Verbs with endings: -eat (-eat), ~et (et), -eat (-eat), -ete (-ete) 3 -ut (-yut) are called verbs of the first conjugation.

Verbs with endings -ish, -yoke, -im, ~ite, -at, (-yat) are called verbs of the second conjugation.

For reflexive verbs, a particle is added to the personal ending -sya (-s). I study, I study, I teach, I study, I teach, I study, well, I drink - I bathe, I bathe - I bathe, I bathe - I bathe,

Note. When conjugating some verbs, there is an alternation of consonants in front of personal endings: shore - you save (m - f); teku - you flow (k - n) - in the verbs of the first conjugation; I wear - you wear (w - s); I drive - you drive (w - h); I sit - you sit (w-d); twist - twist (h - t); sad? - you are sad (u - st): I love - you love (6l-"6); I catch - you catch (ate - in); sculpt - sculpt (pl - n); feed - feed (ml - m); graph - graph (fl - f) - in the verbs of the second conjugation.

Spelling of personal verb endings.

In the ending of the 2nd person singular of the verb after w a letter is written b: you carry, you give, you hurry, you stand.

The letter b is preserved in the 2nd person singular in those cases when a particle is attached to the end of the verb -ss-rushing, studying, swimming.

3. It is necessary to distinguish the indefinite form of verbs into - be 3rd person singular and plural present tense -tsya. It must be remembered that b written only in the indefinite form: he can(what to do?) work(indefinite form), but he(what is he doing?) labors(3rd person).

Spelling of verbs of the first and second conjugations.

Verbs of the 1st and 2nd conjugation differ by ear if the stress falls on personal endings.

You go, you go, you go, you go, you go-1st conjugation.

Hurry, hurry, hurry, hurry, hurry-:2nd conjugation.

If the stress falls on the stem, then the personal endings of the verbs of the 1st and 2nd conjugations almost do not differ by ear. For example: stabbing - sawing, stabbing - sawing. In such cases, the conjugation of the verb is determined by its indefinite form.

Of the verbs with unstressed personal endings, the 2nd conjugation includes:

1. All verbs with unstressed personal endings that have an indefinite form in ~it, for example: build - build, build; love, love, love (except for the verb shave, shave, shave).

2. Seven verbs in -et: look, see, depend, hate, offend, endure, twirl.

3. Four verbs on -at: hear, breathe, hold, drive.

These verbs have no present tense suffixes in the 1st person of the singular -e-, -a-: look - look, see - see, breathe - breathe, hear - hear. Compare: blush - blush(verb of the 1st conjugation, suffix -e- is present in the base) and answer - answer(also of the 1st conjugation, with the suffix -o- in the stem).

All other verbs with unstressed endings belong to the 1st conjugation.

Note. Prefixed verbs belong to the same conjugation as the non-prefixed verbs from which they are derived: sleep - sleep, endure - carry. (I. Utkin.)

Irregular verbs.

Verbs want and run are called heterogeneous. They are conjugated partly according to the 1st, partly according to the 2nd conjugation;

Singular Plural.

I want to run we want to run

do you want to run do you want to run

he wants / runs they want to run

Verbs are specially conjugated eat and give:

I eat ladies we eat we give

you eat give you eat give

he eats will give they eat will give

Verbs derived from these verbs are also conjugated: eat, eat, give out, give away, etc.

Note. In Old Russian, the auxiliary verb to be was also conjugated in a special way: I am, we are seme, you are, you are, he is, they are

In the modern literary language, only forms of the 3rd person have been preserved: there is less essence.

Past tense.

The verb in the past tense has no personal endings: I read, you read, he read (compare with present tense endings: I read, you read, he reads).

The verb in the past tense in the singular changes by gender: the ship has sailed, the boat has sailed, the ship has sailed.

There is no generic ending in the masculine gender, c. the feminine gender ending is -a, average -o: took, took-a, took-o.

In the plural, the past tense verb does not change by gender and has the ending -i. Compare: the students read-and - the students read-and.

The past tense is formed by adding the suffix -l to the stem of the indefinite form: run-t-bezyua-l, walk-t - walk-l, build-t - build-l. Before suffix -l the vowel that stands in an indefinite form before –t: see-saw, hear-heard.

In the masculine gender, after a consonant sound at the end of a word, the suffix -l drops out: crawled - crawled, carried, carried, carried - carried, wiped - wiped.

Reflexive verbs in the past tense have a particle at the end -sya or -s: took, took care: took, took care; took care of; took care of.

Notes.

  • 1. For verbs ending in an indefinite form in -sti and -ch, the past tense is formed from the stem of the present tense, and the final t and d omitted: row - row-y - row, row ~ whether; cherish - shore - shore, shore-whether; stove - bake-y-pek, bake-shi; weave - weave-y - weave-l, weave-whether; lead - ved-at - ve-l, ve-li. For imperfective verbs with an indefinite form in -ku-t, the past tense is formed with the omission of the suffix -well-: soh-well-be - soh, soh-whether: cold-well, cold, cold-whether.
  • 2. The change of the past tense verb by gender, and not by person, is explained by the origin of the past tense. It came from a special complex form of the past tense, which was a combination of a verbal adjective (participle) with a suffix -l and the auxiliary verb to be. The verbal adjective changed by gender and number, and the auxiliary verb by person: did eat (i.e. I did) did thou (i.e. you did), did eat (i.e. he did), did eat (i.e. she did).

Later auxiliary verb to be started skipping. The past tense began to be denoted by one word, i.e., a verbal adjective, which retained its generic endings.

verbal adjectives in -l in the Old Russian language could be not only short, but also complete. The remainder of the full are such adjectives as former (compare the verb was), mature (compare mature), skillful (compare skillful), etc.

Future time

The future tense is simple and complex. For verbs of the perfective form, the future tense is simple: do - do, decide - decide. The future compound occurs in imperfective verbs: do - I will do, decide - I will decide.

The future simple consists of one word and has the same personal endings as the present tense: do, decide - do, decide; do, decide; will decide.

The future compound is formed from the future tense of the verb to be and the indefinite form of the conjugated verb: I will do, I will decide. Verb to be, with which the future tense is formed, is called in this case an auxiliary verb.

The use of tenses.

In our speech, we sometimes use one tense in the meaning of another.

1. The present tense is sometimes used in the sense of the past: the past is told as if it is now passing before one's eyes. This helps to visualize what is being said. I was returning home from the station last night, walking down a dark street. I'm in a hurry. Suddenly I see: at the nearest lantern something is getting dark.

2. The present tense is used in the meaning of the future. For greater liveliness, we speak of the future as if it were already taking place. Often I draw a picture of my future life: I finish school, enter a university, study in the winter, and in the summer I will certainly go on an excursion.

3. We use the future simple tense in the sense of the past when we talk about what has been repeated many times.

I remember that my old comrade would come to me in the evening, sit down beside me and begin to talk about his travels to the far north.

The future tense in the meaning of the past is also used in combination with the word happened. In winter, it used to be that on a dead night we would lay a daring troika ... (P.)

4. We use the future simple in the meaning of the past when we talk about something that happened unexpectedly. I went closer to the girl, and she screamed.

Impersonal verbs.

A special group of verbs are impersonal verbs.

Impersonal verbs mostly denote natural phenomena (darkness, freezing) or various states and experiences of a person (fever, unwell, I remember, I think).

In a sentence, impersonal verbs are predicates, but they represent an action without an actor. With them there is not and cannot be a subject.

Impersonal verbs do not change in persons and numbers. They have in the present and future tense only one form of the 3rd person singular, and in the past tense only the neuter form: evening - evening, dusk - dusk, fever - fever.

Note. Impersonal verbs like feverish, shivering, freezing, were once personal. This was in those distant times, when people still did not know how to fight with nature, believed in the existence of supernatural forces, good and evil, and explained by the action of these mysterious forces both various natural phenomena and the human condition. When they spoke feverish, freezing they thought that both fever and frost were the effects of some special mysterious force, some supernatural being.

Transitive and intransitive verbs.

Verbs, according to their meaning and how they are connected in a sentence with other words, are divided into two groups: transitive and intransitive.

Transitive verbs denote an action that passes to another object, the name of which is in the accusative case without a preposition: I take (what?) a book, I see off (who?) my sister.

The rest of the verbs are intransitive: I lie down, I sleep, I walk, I run, I do (what?), I hope (for what?).

Notes.

  • 1. Transitive verbs can be used in an intransitive sense. Then after them it is impossible to raise the question of whom? what? Compare: The boy draws a dog (the verb draws a transitive one) and Brother draws well (that is, he draws well in general, knows how to draw well; here the verb draws is used in an intransitive sense).
  • 2. After transitive verbs with negation, not the name of the object on which the action passes can be not in the accusative case, but in the genitive: read a book, but did not read books, saw mountains, but did not see mountains. In the genitive case, the name of the object is also in the event that the action of the transitive verb does not apply to the entire object, but to its part: he drank water (that is, part of the water), tried kvass, bought sugar. This is only possible with perfective verbs.

Meaning of reflexive verbs.

Reflexive verbs formed from any transitive verb are intransitive: raise (transitive) - rise (intransitive), wash (transitive) - wash (intransitive), meet (transitive) - meet (intransitive).

Note. There are some verbs that are not reflexive: I walk, I sleep, I drink. There are, on the contrary, such verbs that are used only as reflexive: afraid, laughing, admiring, working.

Particle -sya in reflexive verbs has several meanings. The most important of them are the following.

a) Particle -sya denotes only the intransitivity of the action, i.e., such an action that is not directed to any object: the dog bites, the horse rushes, the sea is rough, the fog rises.

b) Particle -sya gives the verb a proper reflexive meaning: it indicates that the action returns to the actor himself. Compare: bathe (whom?) the child and bathe (i.e., bathe oneself).

c) Particle -sya gives the verb a reciprocal meaning: it indicates that the action takes place between two or more actors or objects. With these verbs, you can ask with whom? with what? For example: meet(with whom? - with a friend), fight, fight.

d) Particle -sya gives the verb a passive meaning .. With these verbs, you can ask questions by whom? how? For example: Rocks (subject) are eroded (with what?) by water. Compare: Water erodes rocks.

e) Particle -sya gives the verb an impersonal meaning. At the same time, she indicates that the action is performed as if by itself, in addition to someone else's will. These verbs can be used to ask questions. to whom? what? For example: can’t sleep (who?) to me (compare: he doesn’t sleep), he doesn’t feel like it, I think.

Note. Origin of verbs -sya. In the Old Russian language, after transitive verbs, a short form of wines could be used. pad. units h. reflexive pronoun sya (i.e., yourself). For example, bathe(i.e. wash yourself). Previously, sya was a separate member of the sentence and could stand in different places in the sentence, that is, in Old Russian one could say: I want to wash myself (I want to wash myself).

Later, the pronoun xia turned from an independent word into a particle, began to be used only after the verb, and, finally, merged with it into one word. At the same time, the verb became intransitive from transitive. ¦

Compare: wash (whom? or what?) and wash (yourself), dress (whom? or what?) and dress (yourself).

Inclinations.

The verb has three moods - indicative, subjunctive and imperative.

The indicative mood of the verb denotes an action that happened, is happening or will actually happen: I read - I read - I will read; read - read. The indicative mood has three tenses: present, past and future.

The subjunctive (or conditional) mood denotes an action that is possible or desirable. The subjunctive mood is formed from the past tense by adding a particle would: Would you come home early. If the weather had been fine yesterday, we would have gone boating.

The particle would be both after the verb and before it, and can also be separated from the verb in other words: If the best rider on the fastest horse rode along our borders, he would spend about two years on this unprecedented run in the world.

The imperative mood denotes an order, a command, as well as a request, a wish. Imperative verbs are used in the 2nd person singular and plural: carry - carry, work - work, cook - cook.

The formation of the imperative mood.

The imperative mood is formed from the basis of the present tense in two ways.

For some verbs, the ending is added to the basis of the present (future) tense -and: go-ut-go, sit-yat - sit, take out-ut-take out, scream-ut - shout.

In other verbs, the imperative mood is formed without an ending and is equal to the basis of the present tense. The stem of such verbs in the imperative mood ends:

1) to a soft consonant (in writing b): throw (kin-ut), drop (throw-yat), hit (hit-yat), cook (ready-yat);

2) to hissing (on a letter b): cut (dir-ut), hide (hide-ut), comfort (comfort-at);

3) on th; read, write, draw.

In the 2nd person plural. number is added ending -te: go-go, quit-quit, read-read, hide-hide.

The imperative mood from reflexive verbs in the code has a particle -sya or -s: Look after - look, look; look - look, look. Throw - throw, throw; rush - rush, rush. Drop it, drop it, drop it; throw - throw, throw.

Sometimes a particle is attached to the imperative -ka. This particle usually softens the order, gives it the character of a friendly address. Let's go and pick chestnuts in the garden. Come here

Note. To express the 1st person plural. numbers of the imperative mood, the usual forms of the 1st person plural are used. numbers of the present or future tense with imperative intonation: Let's go. We will decide. Let's sit down. These forms are also used with the ending -te: Let's go. Decide. Let's sit down. They then either indicate that the command is addressed to several persons, or denote a polite appeal to one person.

To express the 3rd person of the imperative mood, the usual form of the 3rd person is used in conjunction with particles let, let, yes: Long live the muses, long live the mind! (P.) Long live the sun, let the darkness hide! (P.) Let the face burn like the dawn in the morning.

Changing inclinations.

In Russian, one mood can be used in the meaning of another.

The imperative mood is often used in the meaning of the subjunctive mood and the union if. The subject can be in any number and person and usually comes after the predicate. If he had said earlier, everything could have been arranged. (Compare: If he had said earlier...) If we were five mules late, he would have left. (Compare: If we were five minutes late...)

In other cases, on the contrary, the subjunctive mood has the meaning of the imperative mood. You should rest a little. Would you like someone to sing to us. Such turns express a request, advice, a polite offer.

Often in the meaning of the imperative mood, the indefinite form of the verb is used. Be silent / Sit still! Keep quiet/ This use of the indefinite form expresses an insistent and strict command.

Verb suffixes.

From nouns, verbs are formed using suffixes -oe- (at), -ev- (at). In the present tense, these suffixes are replaced by suffixes -yes, -yu-: conversation-talk - talk, grief - grieve - grieve.

Verbs are formed from adjectives and nouns using the suffix -e-(t) (in the present, tense -e-yu): white - turn white - turn white (with the meaning of becoming white), gray-haired - gray-haired (with the meaning of becoming gray-haired), beast-become a beast - a beast (with the meaning of becoming beast) or with the help of the suffix -i-(t) (in the present tense - / o): white - whiten - whiten (with the meaning of making white), litter - litter-litter (with the meaning of making litter).

Verbs are also formed from nouns with the help of the suffix -a-(t): carpenter - carpentry; wise guy - to be smart (with a change to h).

Suffixes -ir-(at), -izir-(at) occur mostly with verbs of foreign origin: telegraph, register, agitate, collectivize, organize.

Spelling of verb suffixes.

To distinguish between unstressed suffixes -ov-(at), -ev-(at) from suffixes -yv-(at), -iv-(at), must form 1st person singular. numbers of the present (future) time.

If the verb is in the 1st person singular. present tense numbers ending in -yu-, -yuyu-, then й in an indefinite form, and in the past tense it is necessary to write -ovate (-oval), -evat (-eval): I advise, advised, advise; mourn, mourn, mourn.

If the verb is in the 1st person singular. the number of the present tense ends in -Ivayu, -ivayu-, then in an indefinite form ", and in the past tense it is necessary to write -yat (-yval), -yvat (-yval): show - show, showed; arrange - arrange, arrange

Notes.

  • 1. This does not include several verbs that end in e-vayu, e-vat: I sow, I start, I put on, I warm, I sing, I overcome. In these verbs, the suffix is ​​-va-, and e belongs to the root. Compare sow and sow-ea-t, start and start-va-t, etc.
  • 2. In addition, you need to remember the following verbs ending in -evayu, -evat, where e belongs to the suffix: eclipse - eclipse, get stuck - get stuck, intend - intend, overwhelm - overwhelm, exhort-exhort.

Particle spelling ns verbs

Negation not written separately with the verb.

The exception is those verbs that are not used without not. For example: resent, hate.

If verbs missing and lacking denote a lack of something, they are written together: My comrade lacks (i.e., he does not have) the ability to get down to business right away. He lacks (i.e., he does not have) endurance in his work.

Verb not enough- in the sense of not reaching anything - is written separately: The child does not reach the table with his hand:

Verb lacks- in the sense of not taking, it is written separately: Our dog barks at strangers, but no one is grabbed by the legs

The verb is perhaps the most used unit of our native language. It is found in texts written in an artistic, scientific, journalistic style, in colloquial and literary genres.

In this article you will find answers to the questions: “How is the verb characterized?”, “What does it mean?”

Verb

It is an independent representative of our beautiful language. It performs two main tasks:

  1. Talks about an action performed by an object, person, phenomenon. For example: ran, jumped, peers, stands, is, eats.
  2. It characterizes the state, property, sign, relation of the object. Consider an example: I get sick, blush, envy.

You can recognize a verb in a sentence by asking it the question “what to do?” or one of its forms ("what am I doing?", "what did I do?", etc.).

Verb forms

All verbs are conditionally divided into four categories:

  1. Initial, it is also an infinitive. It is formed from the stem of the word by suffixing with "t", "ti", "ch". This form does not change according to persons, genders and numbers. Lets you know what action is being taken. Able to act in a proposal in any role. It has features of transition and recurrence. It can be characterized as a perfective or imperfective verb. Examples: lose heart, be sad, dig, learn, view, love.
  2. Conjugated forms. This group can include any changeable having permanent and non-permanent features.
  3. Participle - in modern Russian grammar, this is a special form of the verb. The task of this part of speech is to characterize the attribute of an object by action.
  4. The participle is, according to one version, an invariable verb form. Some linguists distinguish it as a separate one. In the sentence, it denotes an additional, clarifying action.

Verb type

Consider the first constant feature that characterizes the verb. What does the word "view" mean in relation to this part of speech?

All verbs can be divided into two large groups: perfective (CB) and imperfective (NSV).

You can find out what type a word belongs to by asking a question to its infinitive. If the verb answers the question "what to do?" is the perfect look. If the question "what to do?" - imperfect.

Perfective verbs characterize an action that has reached its logical conclusion. Words from the imperfective group denote a process that is still ongoing.

The perfect form of the verb in most cases is achieved using the prefix method.

Verb tenses

In our native language, there are verbs of the past tense, future and present. Any of them is easily recognized in the context with knowledge of the theoretical material.

Past tense verbs describe an action that ended before the beginning of speaking. It should be borne in mind that the time in which the story takes place is not always expressed in the present. You may encounter an option where the future or past tense will meet. For example: "I told my mother that I went to the cinema" - or: "He will say that he successfully completed the task."

Words belonging to the past tense change by gender, number. They are created by adding "l" to the base of the initial form.

The present tense of the verb occurs only in imperfective words. It is expressed with the help of a personal ending. Describes the action taking place at the moment of speaking. It can also perform the following roles:

  1. Describes an action that is constantly repeated. For example: "The mouth of the river flows into the sea."
  2. Talks about an action that happens regularly. For example: "Every Friday at six o'clock she goes to the dance."
  3. Talks about an event that could potentially happen: "Some guys are rude."

The future form of the verb tells about an event that will happen only after the moment of speech comes to an end. It can be represented by both perfective and imperfective verbs.

There are two forms of the future tense: simple and compound. The first is formed with a verb. The second is by adding forms of the lexeme “to be” to the main word (I will, will be, will be, etc.).

Certain verbs of one tense can be used in the meaning of another. For example, it may have the meaning of the present in the context: “Here she is forever like this: she didn’t see anything, she didn’t hear anything.”

Time is considered to be a non-permanent feature.

verb mood

Mood is another inconstant feature of the verb. It expresses the relation of this part of speech to reality. It is divided into three types: indicative, subjunctive, imperative. Each of them has a number of characteristic features.

Indicative verbs represent an actual action taking place in the past, present or future. This is the distinguishing feature. Words belonging to other moods cannot be expressed in any tense.

Imperative verbs are able to convey a request, order, wish, advice. They are formed in two ways: using the suffix "and" or through zero suffixation. In the plural, the ending "those" appears. Words do not change over time.

Subjunctive verbs describe an action that could be realized under a certain set of circumstances. This inclination is formed by adding to the word in the past tense, the particle "by".

Verb: what does the word "conjugation" mean in relation to it?

Conjugation is a constant feature. Its essence lies in changing the verb in persons and numbers. There are only two types of conjugation, which are usually denoted by Roman numerals I and II.

Finding out to which conjugation a word can be attributed is quite simple if you remember simple facts:

  1. If the ending of the verb is stressed, then the conjugation of the word is determined by this form. If it is in an unstressed position - by infinitive.
  2. Verbs that can be defined in the group of the first conjugation are characterized by the endings "eat", "eat", "eat", "eat", "ut", "yut". Related to the second conjugation - "ish", "it", "im", "ite", "at" or "yat".
  3. There is a group of forms which, when changed, have part of the endings of one group, part of another. These are the verbs "to want" and "to run".

In this article, we looked at the verb (what this part of speech means). We got acquainted with some of its permanent and non-permanent features, gave examples. In the future, it will not be difficult for you to identify the verb in the text and give it a brief description if necessary.

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