Learniv
Learniv
▷ Conjugation German - REGEN | Learniv.com

learniv.com  >  en  >  German regular verbs  >  regen

Conjugation German: regen


Translation: rain

Present

er regt

Simple past

er regte

Present perfect

er hat geregt



Conjugation of verb of the regular verb [regen]

Verb conjugation is a method of changing verbs from their infinitive forms. The changes, usually done through endings and auxiliary words, express grammatical categories related to the action or state being described, such as person, number, tense, aspect and mode. Verbs are divided into a number of classes according to their form of conjugation and may be assigned model patterns to help to create the correct forms.

There are simple verb forms (e.g. ich mache, ich machte) and compound verb forms that use an auxiliary verb (e.g. ich habe gemacht, ich werde machen).

There are 6 tenses in German in total. Two of them are simple: the present simple (Präsens) and the past simple (Präteritum). The other four tenses are compound, i.e. they combine an auxiliary verb and the infinitive or the past participle form of the main verb carrying the meaning. The compound tenses include the future simple (Futur I), the present perfect (Perfekt), the past perfect (Plusquamperfekt) and the future perfect (Futur II).

  ...   ... More information


Present simple – Präsens

ich
rege 
du
regst 
er/sie/es
regt 
wir
regen 
ihr
regt 
sie/Sie
regen 

Past simple – Präteritum

ich
regte 
du
regtest 
er/sie/es
regte 
wir
regten 
ihr
regtet 
sie/Sie
regten 

Present perfect – Perfekt

ich
habe geregt 
du
hast geregt 
er/sie/es
hat geregt 
wir
haben geregt 
ihr
habt geregt 
sie/Sie
haben geregt 

Past perfect – Plusquamperfekt

ich
hatte geregt 
du
hattest geregt 
er/sie/es
hatte geregt 
wir
hatten geregt 
ihr
hattet geregt 
sie/Sie
hatten geregt 

Future simple – Futur I

ich
werde regen 
du
wirst regen 
er/sie/es
wird regen 
wir
werden regen 
ihr
werdet regen 
sie/Sie
werden regen 

Future perfect – Futur II

ich
werde geregt haben 
du
wirst geregt haben 
er/sie/es
wird geregt haben 
wir
werden geregt haben 
ihr
werdet geregt haben 
sie/Sie
werden geregt haben 

Subjunctive of verb of the regular verb [regen]

The subjunctive (from the late Latin modus coniunctivus, translated as a form of sentence structure, derived from the Latin verb coniungere – to join).

The subjunctive is a special verb form that usually expresses that the action is conditional or hypothetical.

It expresses possible, probable, hypothetical, desired, dreaded or necessary actions (thus indicating the speaker’s attitude toward the action). It is a form used to express something imagined that may never happen. In particular, it marks the utterance as subjective, doubtful or uncertain.

In German, there is the subjunctive I and the subjunctive II.

The subjunctive I includes the present subjunctive (e.g. er sei, er habe), the future subjunctive and the perfect subjunctive.

The subjunctive I usually expresses someone else’s opinion, often unlikely from the speaker’s point of view (present indicative: Er sagt, dass niemand zu Hause ist. – He says that no one is at home. X present subjunctive: Er sagt, dass niemand zu Hause sei. – He says that (supposedly) no one is at home.).

The subjunctive II includes the past subjunctive (er wäre, er hätte) and the past perfect subjunctive.

  ...   ... More information


Subjunctive I: Present – Konjunktiv I

ich
rege 
du
regest 
er/sie/es
rege 
wir
regen 
ihr
reget 
sie/Sie
regen 

Subjunctive I: Present perfect – Konjunktiv I

ich
habe geregt 
du
habest geregt 
er/sie/es
habe geregt 
wir
haben geregt 
ihr
habet geregt 
sie/Sie
haben geregt 

Subjunctive I: Future simple – Konjunktiv I: Futur I

ich
werde regen 
du
werdest regen 
er/sie/es
werde regen 
wir
werden regen 
ihr
werdet regen 
sie/Sie
werden regen 

Subjunctive I: Future perfect - Konjuktiv I: Futur II

ich
werde geregt haben 
du
werdest geregt haben 
er/sie/es
werde geregt haben 
wir
werden geregt haben 
ihr
werdet geregt haben 
sie/Sie
werden geregt haben 

Subjunctive II: Past simple – Konjunktiv II: Präteritum

ich
regte 
du
regtest 
er/sie/es
regte 
wir
regten 
ihr
regtet 
sie/Sie
regten 

Subjunctive II: Past perfect – Konjunktiv II: Plusquamperfekt

ich
hätte geregt 
du
hättest geregt 
er/sie/es
hätte geregt 
wir
hätten geregt 
ihr
hättet geregt 
sie/Sie
hätten geregt 

Subjunctive II: Future simple – Konjunktiv II: Futur I

ich
würde regen 
du
würdest regen 
er/sie/es
würde regen 
wir
würden regen 
ihr
würdet regen 
sie/Sie
würden regen 

Subjunctive II: Future perfect – Konjunktiv II: Futur II

ich
würde geregt haben 
du
würdest geregt haben 
er/sie/es
würde geregt haben 
wir
würden geregt haben 
ihr
würdet geregt haben 
sie/Sie
würden geregt haben 

Imperativ verb of of the regular verb [regen]

The imperative (from the Latin imperativus) is a verb form that expresses a command, request or prohibition. In many cases, the use of the imperative can come across as rude and impolite. Therefore, a command is often expressed in a more polite way, using other grammatical means.

  ...   ... More information


Imperative – Imperativ

du
rege; reg 
ihr
regt 

Participle forms of verb of the regular verb [regen]

The participle form (from the Latin participare – ‘to take part’) is an indefinite form of a verb that can also be used in a number of ways:

  • to form compound verb tenses;
  • to form the passive voice;
  • as an adjective;
  • as an alternative to subordinate clauses (sentence condensers);
  • and others.

Participles can also be used as adjectives (participial adjectives), e.g. gekauft – gekauft(-e), verpasst – verpasst(-e), vergangen – vergangen(-e), as well as nouns (verbal nouns), e.g. griff – der Griff.

  ...   ... More information


Present participle – Partizip Präsens

ich
regend 

Past participle – Partizip Perfekt

ich
geregt 





Continue studying irregular verbs:
Random choice






Verb Conjugation in German