All regular verbs conjugate the same in the present tense ( including the infinitive and present participle ), so the weak versus strong distinction only matters for the past tense.
32.
This also works with adjectives ( for example, Japanese ), regular verbs in present or past tense ( for example, dances or danced ) and any other suffixes or prefixes.
33.
The auxiliary " eim?" ( ?0??'be'), originally part of the same class, adopted a new set of endings modelled on the passive of regular verbs, as in the following examples:
34.
The following tables present a comparison of the conjugation of the regular verb " amare " " to love " in Classical Latin, and Vulgar Latin ( reconstructed ), and five modern Romance languages.
35.
In the perfect forms ( perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect ), this was a compound verb just like the passive voice of regular verbs ( " factum est ", it has been done ).
36.
Nowak and colleagues demonstrated that the transition of irregular verbs to regular verbs in English over time obeys a simple inverse-square law, thus providing one of the first quantitative laws in the evolution of language.
37.
In English adjectives ( or " stative verbs " in other languages ) the acquisition of a quality, or changes of state, can be expressed with causatives in the same way as with regular verbs.
38.
The KII is formed from the stem of the preterite ( imperfect ) form of the verb and appending the appropriate Konjunktiv I ending as appropriate, although in most regular verbs the final'e'in the stem is dropped.
39.
The preterit is inflected by using the preterit form of the verb, which for the regular verbs includes the suffix "-ed ", and for the strong verbs either the suffix "-t " or a change in the stem vowel.
40.
In regular verbs, the personal infinitive is identical to the subjunctive future tense; but they are different in irregular verbs : " quando formos " ( " when we go ", subjunctive ) versus " ?melhor irmos " ( " it is better that we go " ).