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      Putting verbs through their tenses

      LIVING IN THE PRESENT

      In the present tense, Hebrew verbs are conjugated in four ways: masculine singular, feminine singular, masculine plural, and feminine plural. For example:

       כּוֹתֵב (koh-tehv; write) (MS)

       כּוֹתֶבֶת (koh-teh-veht; write) (FS)

       כּוֹתְבִים (koht-veem; writes) (MP)

       כּוֹתְבוֹת (koht-voht; writes) (FP)

      PUTTIN’ IT IN THE PAST

      In the past tense, Hebrew verbs are conjugated according to number, gender, and person. You can either say the personal pronoun (I, you, he, she, we, you, they), as in אֲנִי כָּתַבְתִּי (ah-nee kah-tahv-tee; I wrote), or drop it, in which case the subject is implied: כָּתַבְתִּי (kah-tahv-tee; [I] wrote).

       כָּתַבְתִּי (kah-tahv-tee; [I] wrote)

       כָּתַבְתָּ (kah-tahv-ta; [you] wrote) (MS)

       כָּתַבְתְּ (kah-tahvt; [you] wrote) (FS)

       כָּתַב (kah-tahv; [he] wrote)

       כָּתְבָה (kaht-vah; [she] wrote)

       כָּתַבְנוּ (kah-tahv-noo; [we] wrote) (MP/FP)

       כְּתַבְתֶּם (kah-tahv-tehm; [you] wrote) (MP)

       כְּתַבְתֶּן (kah-tahv-tehn; [you] wrote) (FP)

       כָּתְבוּ (kaht-voo; [they] wrote) (MP/FP)

      LOOKING TO THE FUTURE

      Like the past tense, the future tense has number, gender, and person, and you can either include the personal pronoun (אֲנִי אֶכְתֹּב, ah-nee eh-tohv; I will write) or drop it (אֶכְתֹּב, eh-tohv; [I] will write) because it’s implied. Here are some examples:

       אֶכְתֹּב (ech-tohv; [I] will write)

       תִּכְתֹּב (teeḥ-tohv; [you] will write) (MS)

       תִּכְתְּבִי (teeh-tuh-vee; [you] will write) (FS)

       יִכְתֹּב (yeeḥ-tohv; [he] will write)

       תִּכְתֹּב (teeḥ-tohv; [she] will write)

       נִכְתֹּב (neeḥ-tohv; [we] will write)

       תִּכְתְּבוּ (teeḥ-tuh-voo; [you] will write) (MP/FP)

       יִכְתְּבוּ (yeeḥ-tuh-voo; [they] will write) (MP/FP)

      COMMAND PERFORMANCE

      To make a command (the imperative mood), you can choose among three forms: “you” (MS), “you” (FS), and “you” (MP/FP). Believe it or not, many Modern Hebrew speakers consider this tense to be quite rude — like something an army commander or strict teacher would say. Generally speaking, you should avoid the command tense. Use the future tense instead, because it’s perceived to be more polite. But if you really want to, you can conjugate the command form like this:

       כתוב (kuh-tohv; [you] Write!) (MS)

       כִּתְבֵי (keet-vee; [you] Write!) (FS)

       כִּתְּבוּ (keet-voo; [you] Write!) (MP/FP)

      Looking at some common verbs

Hebrew Pronunciation Translation
הוֹלֵךְ hoh-lehch goes, walks
קוֹרֵא koh-reh reads
כּוֹתֵב koh-tehv writes
מַחֲלִיה mah-leet decides
מַדְלִיק mahd-leek lights
מַרְגִּישׁ mahr-geesh feels
מְדַבֵּר meh-dah-behr speaks
מִתְלַבֵּשׁ meet-lah-behsh gets dressed
מִצְהָרֵף meetz-tah-rehf joins in
נִכְנַס neech-nahs enters
נוֹסֵעַ noh-seh-ah travels
יוֹשֵׁב yoh-shehv sits

      Detecting adverbs

      Like English, most Hebrew adverbs are similar to adjectives — just with different endings. When you use an adjective as an adverb, you don't conjugate it; it stays in the masculine singular form. Here are a couple of examples:

       הוּא כּוֹתֵב יָפֶה (hoo koh-tehv yah-feh; He writes nicely.)

       הִיא כּוֹתֶבֶת יָפֶה (hee koh-teh-veht yah-feh; She writes nicely.)

      Note