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verbejä

Verbejä is the plural form of verbi in Finnish, meaning verbs. In Finnish grammar, verbs are a class of words that express actions, processes, events, or states and form the predicate of a clause. They are highly inflected and mark person and number in finite forms, allowing subjects to be identified from verb endings alone.

Finnish verbs are organized into several conjugation classes by their infinitive endings and stem changes. In

Negation is formed with the negative auxiliary ei and the main verb in its basic form: en

Non-finite forms include the infinitive (syödä, to eat), the present participle (syövä, eating/who is about to

the
present
tense,
the
verb
stem
receives
personal
endings:
minä
-n,
sinä
-t,
hän
-Ø,
me
-mme,
te
-tte,
he
-vat/-vät.
Example:
syödä
(to
eat)
—
minä
syön,
sinä
syöt,
hän
syö,
me
syömme,
te
syötte,
he
syövät.
The
past
tense
has
forms
ending
in
-in,
-it,
-i,
-imme,
-itte,
-ivat:
söin,
söit,
söi,
söimme,
söitte,
söivät.
syö,
et
syö,
ei
syö.
The
perfect
and
pluperfect
are
formed
with
the
auxiliary
olla
in
the
corresponding
tense
plus
the
past
participle:
olen
syönyt,
olin
syönyt.
The
passive
voice
is
formed
with
a
separate
set
of
endings
such
as
-taan/-tään,
as
in
syödään
(is
eaten
/
we
eat
in
a
generic
sense).
eat),
and
the
past
participle
(syönyt,
eaten).
Verbs
also
provide
moods
such
as
conditional
and
imperative,
and
the
language
uses
word
order
and
verb
endings
to
convey
meaning
rather
than
inflection
alone.