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1.5: The Verbs Haben and Sein

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    79339
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    The verbs sein (to be) and haben (to have) are two of the most common verbs in German and therefore you must memorize their forms. Sein and haben are the infinitive forms of the verbs. "Infinitive forms" are important to know since dictionaries list verbs in that form.

    Present Tense Forms

    The verb sein is highly irregular in its forms, just as is its English counterpart “to be.” In the present tense it is conjugated as follows:

    SINGULAR PLURAL
    ich bin (I am) wir sind (we are)
    du bist (you are) ihr seid (you are)
    er ist (he is) sie sind (they are)
    sie ist (she is) Sie sind (you are)
    es ist (it is)

    NOTE:

    a. du and ihr are the informal pronouns for “you” and are used only with family and friends. Sie (always capitalized) is the formal “you” and is used for both the singular and plural meanings of formal “you.” Be sure to clarify in your translation that you understood which “you” meaning was conveyed in the German original in terms of both number and social level.

    b. Unlike English, which always uses the pronoun “it” for objects that are not equivalent to people, in German the third person singular pronouns, er, sie and es, are also used to refer to masculine, feminine, or neuter nouns. For example: der Tisch (table) would be referred to as er, or die Wand (wall) as sie.

    c. It is helpful to remember that ist is always singular. And sind is always plural, although remember that the pronoun Sie can refer to one or more people. These rules let you quickly identify whether the subject of the sentence is singular or plural, simply by looking at the verb conjugation.

    In the present tense, the verb haben is conjugated as follows:

    SINGULAR PLURAL
    ich habe (I have) wir haben (we have)
    du hast (you have) ihr habt (you have)
    er hat (he has) sie haben (they have)
    sie hat (she has) Sie haben (you have)
    es hat (it has)

    Note: Verb forms ending in –en are always plural (although Sie sometimes refers to a single person). This applies for all verbs except sein, so it is useful to memorize this right away.

    Simple Past Forms

    sein (to be)

    SINGULAR PLURAL
    ich war (was) du warst
    du warst ihr wart
    er war sie waren
    sie war Sie waren
    es war

    haben (to have)

    SINGULAR PLURAL
    ich hatte (had) wir hatten
    du hattest ihr hattet
    er hatte sie hatten
    sie hatte Sie waren
    es hatte

    This page titled 1.5: The Verbs Haben and Sein is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Howard Martin revised by Alan Ng.

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