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German - Present Perfect Tense , Irregular Past Participles, Sein Verbs and Past Participles

Present Perfect Tense

This tense is used more often than the simple past, especially in conversation, and is equivalent to I have asked or I asked.  Regular verbs use a form of haben or sein and a past participle.  Past participles are made by adding ge- to the beginning of the verb stem and -t (or -et, if stem ends in -t or -d) to the end.  

Sagen is to ask, and -sag- is the stem; therefore gesagt is the past participle.  
Arbeiten is to work, and -arbeit- is the stem; therefore gearbeitet is the past participle.
Machen is to do/make, and -mach- is the stem; therefore gemacht is the past participle.

Verbs ending in -ieren only add the -t ending.  Studieren is to study and studier- is the stem, so studiert is the past participle.  

The form of haben or sein is placed where the verb should be, and the past participle goes to the end of the sentence.  Ex:  Ich habe meinen Bruder gefragt - I asked my brother.

Haben or Sein

Most verbs use haben, but a few use sein, if and only if, both of these conditions are met:

  1. The verb expresses motion or change of condition.

  2. The verb is intransitive (i.e. cannot take a direct object.)

When modals are used in the present perfect tense with a dependent infinitive, the past participle is not used.  The infinitive of the modal acts as the past participle.  Logically, I had to go home would be translated as ich habe nach Hause gehen gemußt.  However, it is actually Ich habe nach Hause gehen müssen.  When there is no other infinitive in the sentence, then the past participles of the modals are used.  I had to would be translated as Ich habe gemußt.

All modals, as well as reflexive verbs, use haben instead of sein in the present perfect tense.  The reflexive pronouns follow the auxiliary verb as in Ich habe mir den Arm gebrochen.  I broke my arm.

With separable prefixes, the prefix comes before the ge- in a past participle, such as angekommen and aufgestanden.  From the participle of the base verb, and then add the prefix to the beginning.  But note that the prefix does change the entire meaning of the verb, and it may take a different auxiliary verb than its base verb.  For example, stehen takes haben, but aufstehen takes sein.

With inseparable prefixes, whether the verb is regular or irregular, there is no ge- prefix when forming the past participle, such as besucht and verloren.

To express something that has been going on or happening for a period of time, German using the present tense (rather than the past) and the word schon. "I have been studying German for two years" translates to Ich studiere Deutsch schon zwei Jahre.

Irregular Past Participles

Like regular verbs, you use a form of haben or sein and a past participle; but forming the participles is much more complicated.  The past participles begin with ge- and end with -en (with some exceptions).  The new stems in between must be memorized, for they are unpredictable and many contain vowel and consonant changes.

Irregular Past Participles that use Haben
beginnen begin begonnen
beschliessen decide beschlossen
bitten ask gebeten
brechen break gebrochen
empfehlen recommend empfohlen
essen eat gegessen
finden find gefunden
fressen eat (of animals) gefressen
frieren freeze gefroren
geben give gegeben
gewinnen win gewonnen
gießen pour, water gegossen
halten hold gehalten
heißen be called geheißen
helfen help geholfen
klingen sound geklungen
lassen let, allow gelassen
leiden suffer gelitten
lesen read gelesen
liegen recline gelegen
lügen lie gelogen
nehmen take genommen
reissen tear gerissen
riechen smell gerochen
rufen call gerufen
scheinen shine geschienen
schlafen sleep geschlafen
schließen shut geschlossen
schneiden cut geschnitten
schreiben write geschrieben
schreien cry geschrieen
schweigen be silent geschwiegen
schwingen swing geschwungen
sehen see gesehen
senden send gesandt
singen sing gesungen
sitzen sit gesessen
sprechen speak gesprochen
stehen stand gestanden
tragen wear getragen
treffen meet getroffen
trinken drink getrunken
tun do getan
vergessen forget vergessen
verlassen leave verlassen
verlieren lose verloren
verstehen understand verstanden
verzeihen forgive verziehen
waschen wash gewaschen
werfen throw geworfen
ziehen pull gezogen

Some verbs change their stems, like all irregular verbs; but take the endings for regular verbs instead of irregular verbs.  They form their past participles like regular verbs.  (Ge-stem-t)

Infinitive Irregular Stem Past Participle
brennen-to burn brann- gebrannt
bringen-to bring brach- gebracht
denken-to think dach- gedacht
kennen-to know (people) kann- gekannt
nennen-to call, name nann- genannt
rennen-to run rann- gerannt
wenden-to turn wand- gewandt
wissen-to know (facts) wuß- gewußt

Sein Verbs and Past Participles

The following verbs use sein as the auxiliary verb, and many have irregular past participles.

bleiben remain geblieben
fahren drive gefahren
fallen fall gefallen
fliegen fly geflogen
geboren be born geboren
gehen go gegangen
gelingen succeed gelungen
geschehen happen geschehen
kommen come gekommen
laufen run gelaufen
passieren happen passiert
reisen travel gereist
reiten ride geritten
schwimmen swim geschwommen
sein be gewesen
springen jump gesprungen
steigen climb gestiegen
sterben die gestorben
treten step getreten
wachsen grow gewachsen
werden become geworden
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