In the second lesson we learned how to conjugate regular Italian verbs and the verb essere – to be. Now let’s meet the other irregular verbs you will use every day. The bad news: their forms don’t follow the regular pattern, so you have to memorize them. The good news: these verbs are so common that after a couple of weeks of practice they memorize themselves.

AVERE – to have

Io ho I have
Tu hai You have
Lui, Lei ha He, she has
Noi abbiamo We have
Voi avete You have
Loro hanno They have

Remember from the first lesson: the letter H is always silent. “Ho” sounds like [o], “hanno” like [anno]. The H is only there to distinguish these forms in writing: ho (I have) vs o (or), hanno (they have) vs anno (year).

ANDARE – to go

Io vado I go
Tu vai You go
Lui, Lei va He, she goes
Noi andiamo We go
Voi andate You go
Loro vanno They go

FARE – to do, to make

Io faccio I do
Tu fai You do
Lui, Lei fa He, she does
Noi facciamo We do
Voi fate You do
Loro fanno They do

Italians use FARE everywhere: fare colazione (to have breakfast), fare una foto (to take a photo), fare una domanda (to ask a question), fare la spesa (to do the grocery shopping).

STARE – to stay, to be (about state)

Io sto I am / I stay
Tu stai You are / you stay
Lui, Lei sta He, she is / stays
Noi stiamo We are / we stay
Voi state You are / you stay
Loro stanno They are / they stay

STARE is the verb from the question “Come stai?” – How are you? The answer: “Sto bene, grazie” – I’m fine, thanks. We will meet STARE again in the lesson about progressive tenses.

DARE – to give

Io do I give
Tu dai You give
Lui, Lei dà He, she gives
Noi diamo We give
Voi date You give
Loro danno They give

DIRE – to say

Io dico I say
Tu dici You say
Lui, Lei dice He, she says
Noi diciamo We say
Voi dite You say
Loro dicono They say

VENIRE – to come

Io vengo I come
Tu vieni You come
Lui, Lei viene He, she comes
Noi veniamo We come
Voi venite You come
Loro vengono They come

USCIRE – to go out

Io esco I go out
Tu esci You go out
Lui, Lei esce He, she goes out
Noi usciamo We go out
Voi uscite You go out
Loro escono They go out

BERE – to drink

Io bevo I drink
Tu bevi You drink
Lui, Lei beve He, she drinks
Noi beviamo We drink
Voi bevete You drink
Loro bevono They drink

BERE looks scary in the infinitive, but its present tense is actually regular if you know the trick: the old form of the verb was “bevere”, and Italians conjugate it from the stem BEV-.

Verbs like FINIRE – the ISC group

One more group before we finish. Many -IRE verbs insert -ISC- between the stem and the ending, in every form except noi and voi:

Io finisco I finish
Tu finisci You finish
Lui, Lei finisce He, she finishes
Noi finiamo We finish
Voi finite You finish
Loro finiscono They finish

The most useful verbs of this group: capire – to understand (capisco – I understand), preferire – to prefer (preferisco), pulire – to clean (pulisco), spedire – to send (spedisco). “Non capisco” (I don’t understand) might be your most used phrase in the first weeks of learning, so it’s worth memorizing today.

Examples

Dove vai? – Where are you going?

Vado a casa – I’m going home

Ho due fratelli – I have two brothers

Che cosa fai stasera? – What are you doing tonight?

Facciamo una foto! – Let’s take a photo!

Come sta, signora Rossi? – How are you, Mrs. Rossi? (formal)

Perché non vieni con noi? – Why don’t you come with us?

Esco con gli amici il sabato – I go out with friends on Saturdays

Gli italiani bevono molto caffè – Italians drink a lot of coffee

Che cosa dici? – What are you saying?

Ti do il mio numero – I give you my number

Vocabulary

avere – to have

andare – to go

fare – to do, to make

stare – to stay, to be

dare – to give

dire – to say

venire – to come

uscire – to go out

bere – to drink

casa – house, home

fratello – brother

sorella – sister

stasera – tonight

sabato – Saturday

caffè – coffee

foto – photo

numero – number

con – with

Exercises

Use the correct form of the verb in the present tense

  1. Io ______________ una sorella (AVERE) – I have a sister
  2. Dove tu ______________? (ANDARE) – Where are you going?
  3. Noi ______________ colazione al bar (FARE) – We have breakfast at the cafe
  4. Come ______________ i tuoi genitori? (STARE) – How are your parents?
  5. Loro ______________ molta acqua (BERE) – They drink a lot of water
  6. Perché non ______________ con noi? (VENIRE, tu) – Why don’t you come with us?
  7. Io non ______________ mai il venerdì (USCIRE) – I never go out on Fridays
  8. Che cosa ______________ il professore? (DIRE) – What does the professor say?
  9. Voi ______________ troppi compiti (DARE) – You give too much homework
  10. Marco e Anna ______________ al cinema (ANDARE) – Marco and Anna go to the cinema
  11. Tu ______________ ragione (AVERE) – You are right (literally: you have reason)
  12. Io ______________ sport tre volte alla settimana (FARE) – I do sports three times a week

Answers:

1: ho; 2: vai; 3: facciamo; 4: stanno; 5: bevono; 6: vieni; 7: esco; 8: dice; 9: date; 10: vanno; 11: hai; 12: faccio