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Is Gegehen a word?

Is Gegehen a word?

Depending on the meaning and context of the sentence, the present perfect tense of the German verb “gehen” can either mean “I went” (ich bin gegangen) or “I have gone”.

What is the present tense of Gewesen?

Conjugation of the Verb “Sein” – Present Perfect Tense (Perfekt)

ich bin gewesen I was/have been
du bist gewesen you were/have been
er/sie/es ist gewesen he/she/it was/has been

How do you conjugate gehen?

The imperative is only used in four forms, and it is used like so:

  1. du form: geh! (used without pronoun)
  2. ihr form: geht! (used without pronoun)
  3. wir form: gehen wir!
  4. Sie form: gehen Sie!

How do you conjugate Kochen?

Verb conjugation of “kochen” in German

  1. ich koche. du kochst.
  2. er kochte. wir haben gekocht.
  3. ihr werdet kochen.
  4. sie würden kochen.

What is the past participle of Machen?

Past participles: regular

Infinitive Past participle
machen ge-mach-t
frühstücken ge-frühstück-t
kochen ge-koch-t

How do you use Gewesen?

Example: “Ich bin gestern auf der Party gewesen.” – “I was at the party yesterday.” Or: “Bist du schon einmal in Berlin gewesen?” – “Have you been to Berlin?” Usually it is interchangeable with “war” but it is used for diversification. It is used in Northern Germany (Hamburg) too in our everyday language.

Is Kochen a regular verb?

– all forms of the verb, examples, rules….Present.

ich koch(e)⁵
er kocht
wir kochen
ihr kocht
sie kochen

Is Sagen dative?

The following verbs are always used with the dative case: sagen (“to say” – when introducing the person spoken to), helfen (to help), gefallen (to like, to please), gehören (to belong), schmecken (to taste), danken (to thank), antworten (to reply to), glauben (to believe).

Is Machen regular or irregular?

Here’s an example of the regular verb machen (pronounced MAHC-hen), which means ‘to do’, and its conjugations. The infinitive (the word you are given when you look it up in the dictionary) of the verb is machen.

What does GSI mean in Swiss German?

gsi generally means “was” Close, but actually it means “been” and always comes with a present form of “sii” = “to be.” Unlike Standard German, Swiss German has no past tense.

How do you use hatte and war?

In German, as in English, the past perfect describes a time previous to another in the past. It is constructed just like the present perfect tense, except that the auxiliary “haben” or “sein” is in its simple past form: “hatte” or “war.”

Does bleiben take haben or sein?

There are three important verbs that do not fit into the intransitive verb rule and have to use sein as the auxiliary verb: bleiben (to stay), werden (to become) and sein (to be). They do not express movement but they must take sein.