There are no irregular verbs. Verbs in Esperanto are so simple that you will find it easy to conjugate every verb in the present, past, and future tense after this post. Verbs in the infinitive end in -i. The verb
esti means "to be". Let's conjugate this in English first.
I am
thou art
he is
she is
it is
one is
we are
you are
they are
As a native English speaker, I find this simple. But the verb "to be" in English is irregular. It's irregular in the Romance languages as well. Spanish is more complicated than English because Spanish has two verbs which mean "to be" -
ser and
estar. Not only must one remember how to conjugate each one, one must also know when to use each. Let's just look at
ser:
yo soy
tú eres
el es
ella es
usted es
nosotros somos
vosotros sois
ellos son
ellas son
ustedes son
Much more variation than in English and causes non-native speakers of Spanish much difficulty. Now, let's look at Esperanto's
esti
mi estas
ci estas(Ci is almost never used, but is listed here for completeness)
li estas
ŝi estas
oni estas
ĝi estas
ni estas
vi estas
ili estas
Esti, like all Esperanto verbs, is regular. To conjugate
esti in the present tense, remove the -i at the end and add -as
Let's try it with
manĝi - to eat
Removing the -i leaves us with the root
manĝ. Add -as and we have
manĝas. We won't even bother listing out the pronouns with it because the verb does not change no matter which pronoun we use it with.
What about the other tenses? They're just as easy. For the future, drop the -i and add -os. This would give us
estos and
manĝos for our examples.
Mi manĝos - I will eat
Vi estos - You will be
For the past, drop the -i and add -is.
Ni manĝis - We ate
Ili estis - They were
It's that simple. Here are some useful verbs to experiment with:
- helpi - to help
- doni - to give
- veni - to come
- lerni - to learn
- stari - to stand
- sidi - to sit
- dormi - to sleep
- legi - to read
- trinki - to drink
- voli - to want
- bezoni - to need
- paroli - to speak
You can also use the infinitive as-is.
Mi venis helpi means "I came to help."