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So Ive been around town and heard some people say that you enjoy the company of Mudkipz!? |
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{{Expert-subject|Linguistics|date=November 2008}} |
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{{Refimprove|date=November 2006}} |
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{{otheruses4|the part of speech|the physical activity program|VERB (program)|English usage of verbs|English verbs}} |
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{{Redirect|Verbs|the rapper|Verbs (rapper)}} |
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{{ExamplesSidebar|35%| |
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* I '''washed''' the car yesterday. |
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* The equation '''looked''' confusing. |
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* John '''studies''' English and French. |
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}} |
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In [[syntax]], a '''verb''' is a [[word]] ([[part of speech]]) that usually denotes an action (''bring'', ''read'', ''walk'', ''run'', ''murder''), an occurrence (''decompose'', ''shine''), or a state of being (''exist'', ''stand''). Depending on the [[language]], a verb may be [[Inflection|inflected]] (modified in form) according to many factors, possibly including its [[grammatical tense|tense]], [[grammatical aspect|aspect]], [[grammatical mood|mood]] and [[grammatical voice|voice]], as in English ''I '''have''''' (present tense) versus ''I '''had''''' (past tense). It may also agree with the [[grammatical person|person]], [[grammatical gender|gender]], and/or [[grammatical number|number]] of some of its arguments ([[subject (grammar)|subject]], [[object (grammar)|object]], etc.), as in English ''I '''have''''' versus ''he '''has'''''. A verb inflected in this way is known as a [[finite verb]]. |
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== Agreement == |
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{{main|Verb conjugation}} |
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In languages where the verb is inflected, it often agrees with its primary argument (what we tend to call the subject) in person, number and/or gender. With the exception of the verb ''to be'', English shows distinctive agreement only in the third person singular, present tense form of verbs, which, in regular verbs, is marked by adding "-s" (''I walk'', ''he walk'''s'''''). The rest of the persons are not distinguished in the verb (''I walk'', ''you walk'', ''they walk'' etc.). |
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[[Spanish language|Spanish]] and other [[Romance languages]] inflect verbs for tense/mood/aspect and they agree in person and number (but not in gender, as for example in [[Polish language|Polish]]) with the subject. [[Japanese language|Japanese]], in turn, inflects verbs for many more categories, but shows absolutely no agreement with the subject. [[Basque language|Basque]], [[Georgian language|Georgian]], and some other languages, have ''[[polypersonal agreement]]'': the verb agrees with the subject, the direct object and even the secondary object if present. |
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== Valency == |
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{{main|Valency (linguistics)}} |
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The number of arguments that a verb takes is called its ''valency'' or ''valence''. Verbs can be classified according to their valency: |
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* '''[[Intransitive verb|Intransitive]]''' (valency = 1): the verb only has a [[subject (grammar)|subject]]. For example: "he runs", "it falls". |
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* [[transitive verb|'''Transitive''']] (valency = 2): the verb has a subject and a [[direct object]]. For example: "she eats fish", "we hunt nothing". |
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In English, it is impossible to have verbs with zero valency. [[Weather verb]]s are often [[impersonal verb|impersonal]] (subjectless) in [[null-subject language]]s like [[Spanish language|Spanish]], where the verb ''llueve'' means "It rains". In English, they require a [[dummy pronoun]], and therefore formally have a valency of 1.{{Dubious|date=March 2008}} |
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The intransitive and transitive are typical, but the impersonal and objective are somewhat different from the norm. In this sense you can see that a verb is a person, place, thing, or link. In the objective the verb takes an object but no subject, the nonreferent subject in some uses may be marked in the verb by an incorporated dummy pronoun similar to the English weather verb (see below). Impersonal verbs take neither subject nor object, as with other null subject languages, but again the verb may show incorporated dummy pronouns despite the lack of subject and object phrases. Tlingit lacks a ditransitive, so the indirect object is described by a separate, extraposed clause.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} |
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English verbs are often flexible with regard to valency. A transitive verb can often drop its object and become intransitive; or an intransitive verb can take an object and become transitive. |
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In the first example, the verb ''move'' has no grammatical object. (In this case, there may be an object understood – the subject (I/myself). The verb is then possibly reflexive, rather than intransitive); in the second the subject and object are distinct. The verb has a different valency, but the form remains exactly the same. |
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In many languages other than English, such valency changes are not possible like this; the verb must instead be inflected in order to change the valency.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} |
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== Verbal noun and verbal adjective == |
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{{main|Non-finite verb}} |
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Most languages have a number of [[verbal noun]]s that describe the action of the verb. In [[Indo-European languages]], there are several kinds of verbal nouns, including [[gerund]]s, [[infinitive]]s, and [[supine]]s. English has gerunds, such as ''seeing'', and infinitives such as ''to see''; they both can function as nouns; ''seeing is believing'' is roughly equivalent in meaning with ''to see is to believe.'' These terms are sometimes applied to verbal nouns of non-Indo-European languages. |
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In the Indo-European languages, verbal adjectives are generally called [[participle]]s. English has an [[active voice|active]] participle, also called a present participle; and a [[passive voice|passive]] participle, also called a past participle. The active participle of ''break'' is ''breaking'', and the passive participle is ''broken''. When used adjectivally, the active participle describes [[noun]]s that perform the action given in the verb, e.g. ''I heard the sound of breaking glass''. The passive participle describes nouns that have been the object of the action of the verb, e.g. ''I saw the broken glass scattered across the floor.'' |
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Other languages have [[attributive verb]] forms with tense and aspect. This is especially common among [[SOV language|verb-final languages]], where attributive verb phrases act as [[relative clause]]s. |
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== See also == |
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{{Col-begin}} |
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{{Col-2}} |
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* [[Linguistics]] |
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===Verbs in different languages=== |
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* [[Ancient Greek verbs]] |
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* [[Basque verbs]] |
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* [[Bulgarian verbs]] |
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* [[Chinese verbs]] |
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* [[English verbs]] |
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* [[Finnish verb conjugation]] |
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* [[French verbs]] |
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* [[German verbs]] |
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* [[Germanic verb]]s |
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* [[Hebrew verb conjugation]] |
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* [[Hungarian verbs]] |
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* [[Ilokano verb]]s |
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* [[Irish verbs]] |
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* [[Japanese consonant and vowel verbs]] |
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* [[Japanese verb conjugations and adjective declensions|Japanese verb conjugations]] |
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* [[Korean verbs]] |
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* [[Latin verbs]] |
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* [[Persian verbs]] |
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* [[Portuguese verb conjugation]] |
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* [[Proto-Indo-European verb]] |
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* [[Romance verbs]] |
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* [[Romanian verbs]] |
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* [[Sanskrit verbs]] |
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* [[Sesotho verbs]] |
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* [[Slovene verbs]] |
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* [[Spanish verbs]] |
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* [[Tigrinya verbs]] |
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{{Col-2}} |
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===Grammar=== |
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* [[Grammar]] |
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* [[Grammatical aspect]] |
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* [[Grammatical mood]] |
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* [[Grammatical tense]] |
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* [[Grammatical voice]] |
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* [[Performative utterance]] |
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* [[Phrase structure rules]] |
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* [[Sentence (linguistics)]] |
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* [[Syntax]] |
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* [[Transitivity (grammatical category)]] |
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* [[Verb argument]] |
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* [[Verb framing]] |
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* [[Verbification]] |
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* [[Verb phrase]] |
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===Other=== |
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* ''[[Le Train de Nulle Part]]'': A 233-page book without a single verb. |
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{{Col-end}} |
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{{lexical categories|state=collapsed}} |
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== References == |
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{{reflist}} |
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* Gideon Goldenberg, "On Verbal Structure and the Hebrew Verb", in: idem, ''Studies in Semitic Linguistics'', Jerusalem: Magnes Press 1998, pp. 148–196 [English translation; originally published in Hebrew in 1985]. |
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== External links == |
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{{Wiktionarypar|verb}} |
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<!-- interwiki --> |
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[[Category:Parts of speech]] |
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[[Category:Verb types| ]] |
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[[Category:Verbs| ]] |
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[[af:Werkwoord]] |
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[[als:Verb]] |
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[[ar:فعل]] |
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[[an:Berbo]] |
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[[ast:Verbu]] |
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[[ay:Parliri]] |
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[[be-x-old:Дзеяслоў]] |
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[[bs:Glagoli]] |
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[[br:Verb]] |
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[[bg:Глагол]] |
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[[ca:Verb]] |
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[[cv:Глагол]] |
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[[cs:Sloveso]] |
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[[cy:Berf]] |
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[[da:Udsagnsord]] |
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[[de:Verb]] |
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[[es:Verbo]] |
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[[eo:Verbo]] |
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[[eu:Aditz]] |
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[[fa:فعل]] |
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[[fo:Sagnorð]] |
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[[fr:Verbe]] |
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[[fy:Tiidwurd]] |
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[[gv:Breear]] |
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[[gd:Gnìomhair]] |
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[[gl:Verbo]] |
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[[ko:동사 (품사)]] |
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[[hr:Glagoli]] |
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[[id:Verba]] |
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[[ia:Verbo]] |
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[[os:Мивдисæг]] |
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[[is:Sagnorð]] |
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[[it:Verbo]] |
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[[he:פועל]] |
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[[ka:ზმნა]] |
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[[kk:Етістік]] |
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[[sw:Kitenzi]] |
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[[la:Verbum (grammatica Latina)]] |
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[[lv:Darbības vārds]] |
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[[lt:Veiksmažodis]] |
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[[li:Wèrkwaord]] |
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[[ln:Likelelo]] |
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[[hu:Ige]] |
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[[mk:Глагол]] |
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[[ml:ക്രിയ (വ്യാകരണം)]] |
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[[ms:Kata kerja]] |
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[[mn:Үйл үг]] |
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[[nl:Werkwoord]] |
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[[nds-nl:Waarkwoord]] |
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[[ja:動詞]] |
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[[no:Verb]] |
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[[nn:Verb]] |
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[[oc:Vèrbe]] |
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[[nds:Verb]] |
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[[pl:Czasownik]] |
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[[pnt:Ρήμαν]] |
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[[pt:Verbo]] |
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[[ro:Verb]] |
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[[qu:Ruray rimana]] |
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[[ru:Глагол]] |
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[[sah:Туохтуур]] |
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[[se:Vearba]] |
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[[stq:Tiedwoud (Verb)]] |
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[[sq:Folja]] |
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[[simple:Verb]] |
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[[sk:Sloveso]] |
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[[sl:Glagol]] |
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[[sr:Глаголи]] |
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[[sh:Glagol]] |
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[[fi:Verbi]] |
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[[sv:Verb]] |
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[[tl:Pandiwa]] |
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[[ta:வினைச்சொல்]] |
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[[th:คำกริยา]] |
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[[tr:Fiil]] |
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[[uk:Дієслово]] |
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[[wa:Viebe]] |
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[[war:Pan-unod]] |
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[[yi:צייטווארט]] |
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[[bat-smg:Veikruodis]] |
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[[zh:动词]] |
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[http://www.archivium.biz/index_EN.php Italian Verbs Coniugator and Analyzer] Conjugation and Analysis of Regular and Irregular Verbs, and also of Neologisms, like ''googlare'' for ''to google''. |
Revision as of 15:05, 7 January 2010
So Ive been around town and heard some people say that you enjoy the company of Mudkipz!?