Armenian verbs


The verbal morphology of Armenian is complicated by the existence of two main dialects, Eastern and Western. The following sketch will be a comparative look at both dialects.

Non-finite forms

Infinitive

The infinitive of Armenian verbs is formed with the stem, the theme vowel, and the affix -լ.
The endings reflect the number of conjugations possible. Western Armenian is conservative, retaining three conjugations in a, e, and i, while Eastern Armenian has collapsed I and II:
ClassWesternEasterngloss
I
սիրել
sirel
սիրել
sirel
to love
II
խօսիլ
xōsil
խոսել
xosel
to speak
III
կարդալ
gartal
կարդալ
kardal
to read

Stems

There are two main stems per verb, the present stem and past stem. For conjugations I/II, the past stem is identical to the present stem, which is basically the verb minus the theme vowel and ending:
The augment for the third conjugation is sometimes in -եց.

Participles

The number and type of participles varies by dialect.

Future participle

Both Eastern and Western Armenian form the common future participle in -լու. Western Armenian has one additional future participle in -լիք :

Present and past participles

Present
Eastern Armenian has three present participles, while Western Armenian has one. The two exclusively Eastern present participles are in -ում and -լիս ; both affixes attach to the present stem. Eastern and Western Armenian have a common present participle -ող, which attaches to the past stem; it is sometimes used as an agentive noun: ուսանող ].
Past
All affixes here attach to the past stem. Both dialects have a common past passive participle in -ած. Where the dialects differ is the past active participle. The Western Armenian participle is -եր for all conjugations, while Eastern Armenian has -ել.

Finite forms

Introduction: general overview

Armenian features within its verbal system a system that encodes person and number, as well as tense, mood, and aspect
Armenian inherited from Indo-European two sets of synthetic affixes corresponding roughly to a "present" or general series, and a past series:
How these affixes are used varies between the two modern dialects of Armenian.

Tense/mood/aspect

Both dialects have five moods: indicative, conditional, optative/subjunctive, necessitative, imperative; of these only the imperative has no tense distinction. The number of tenses varies by dialect. Aspect is divided roughly the same in both dialects, but the distribution is slightly different.

Indicative mood

Both Eastern and Western feature one present, one future, and two past tenses. Their formation varies by dialect.
Present
Formation of the present tense differs between Eastern and Western. In form, the present indicative of Eastern Armenian has no corresponding Western formation. However, the Western present indicative is formed identically to the Eastern present conditional.
Eastern Armenian uses the -ում participle with the present tense of Eastern Armenian verb լինել. Western Armenian uses a synthetic general form of the verb preceded by the particle կը /gə/. The synthetic form conjugates according to the verb's theme vowel.
The formation of the imperfect is similar to the present-tense formation in both dialects. Eastern Armenian uses the -ում participle with the imperfect of verb լինել. Western Armenian uses a synthetic imperfect form of the verb preceded by the particle կը /gə/.
Note that in all forms, Eastern and Western, that feature the combination էի, there is an epenthetic yod: sirum ēi or ; gë sirēi.
Future
Like the formation of the present tense, the future tense in Armenian intersects two varying constructions with opposite meanings. The Eastern future tense is made with the future participle in -լու with the present tense of verb լինել. The Western future tense is made with the general synthetic verb preceded by the particle պիտի.
Note that in all Eastern forms that feature the combination ու + ե, epenthetic yod appears: kardalu em or.
Preterite
In various grammars, this is called the preterite, the perfect, or sometimes the aorist. Both Eastern and Western Armenian use a synthetic preterite, which is formed by deleting the infinitive marker and theme vowel, then:
· Class I and II verbs add -եց ;
· Class III verbs add -աց.
The preterite affixes are similar to the imperfect endings of the verb "to be"
In Class III verbs, the preterite stem and the past stem are identical.
tenseEasternWesterngloss
presentՆա գիրքը կարդում է
Na girk῾ë kardum ē
Ան կը կարդայ գիրքը
An gë garta kirk῾ë
He is reading/reads the book
imperfectՆրանք իմ գիրքը կարդում էին
Nrank῾ im girk῾ë kardum ēin
Անոնք կը կարդային իմ գիրքը
Anonk῾ gë gartayin im kirk῾ë
They were reading/used to read my book
futureԴու իր գիրքը կարդալու ես
Du ir girk῾ë kardalu es
Դուն պիտի կարդաս իր գիրքը
Tun bidi gartas ir kirk῾ë
You will read his book
preteriteՄենք մի գիրք կարդացինք
Menk῾ mi girk῾ kardac῾ink῾
Մենք կարդացինք գիրք մը
Menk῾ gartac῾ink῾ kirk῾ më
We read a book

Optative mood

The optative mood in Armenian is identical in both dialects. There are two tenses: non-past and past.
Non-past
The non-past optative is the simple "present" conjugated form, as compared to other Indo-European languages:
1Historically, verbs of the third conjugation ended in final յ, which in traditional orthography is silent in word final position. Due to spelling reforms conducted in the earliest 20th century, final յ is missing from the Eastern conjugation
Past
The past optative is the simple "imperfect" conjugated form, as compared to other Indo-European languages:
1
In both dialects, the combinations եի and էի are pronounced as though spelt "եյի" and "էյի", meaning that սիրեի and սիրէի are both pronounced. The latent yod յ is written and pronounced in class III verbs.

Conditional mood

The conditional is mostly similar in both dialects.
In Eastern Armenian, the non-past conditional is formed by affixing կ- before the non-past optative. With this formation, Eastern Armenian also has a past conditional with k- plus past optative. Due to phonological restrictions, կ is pronounced before another consonant: կկարդա ; կկարդային .
Western Armenian does the same, but it has another form identical to its Future in the Past. The former has always been more prevalent, while the latter is falling in disuse.
The Eastern conditional forms, with slight orthographic variation, are identical to the Western present and imperfect indicative forms:
formEastern glossWestern gloss
կը կարդայ he would read
conditional
he reads
pres. indic.
կը կարդային they would have read
past conditional
they would read / they used to read
imperf. indic.

The second Western Armenian conditional is identical to the Eastern Past Necessitative.

Imperative mood

1Optional spoken forms
In both Eastern and Western Armenian, the imperative consists of the affirmative and the negative, and singular and plural forms.
Eastern formWestern formgloss
Խոսի՛ր
Xosir!
Խօսէ՛
Xōsē!
Speak !
Սիրեgե՛ք
Sirec῾ek῾!
Սիրեgէ՛ք
Sirec῾ēk῾!
Love !

Necessitative mood

Both dialects have what is known as the necessitative mood. Both dialects have a past and a non-past necessitative. Eastern Armenian forms its necessitative by adding particle piti before the optative forms. Western Armenian forms its necessitative with the lu future participle plus the forms of әllal
Note that the EA particle piti is orthographically identical to the Western particle bidi, meaning that the Eastern necessitative forms are identical in form to the Western future indicative and conditional. Also note that the Western necessitative forms correspond to Eastern future indicative :
formEastern glossWestern gloss
կարդալու էhe shall/will read
fut. indicative
he should/must read
non-past necessitative
պիտի սիրեմI should/must love
non-past necessitative
I will/shall love
fut. indicative

Voice

Armenian has two voices: Active and Passive.
All the forms above are Active. To make them passive, add the identifying letter վ in front of the ending.
Present and past perfect
Note: In Western Armenian, the present perfect and past perfect have two forms. One is formed by the past active participle and the verb to be, while the other uses the more prevalent past participle. The first may denote the mediative, the inferential, or the reportative. The second is more akin to the Eastern Perfect and the resultative.
The present perfect is formed with the l-past participle plus the present form of լինել. The past perfect is the l-past participle plus the imperfect of linel.
Future perfect (future in the past)
The Eastern future perfect indicative is formed like the future indicative tense, substituting the present forms of the verb լինել linel with the imperfect.
In Western Armenian, it is identical to the imperfect, substituting կը with պիտի.
This tense is used with events which were most likely to happen, which were to happen, according to the speaker's firm conviction, but they either haven't happened, or it's not known.
A table of the perfect forms thus:
FormTenseGloss
կարդաgել եմpresent anteriorI have read
կարդաgել էիpast anteriorI had read
կարդալու էիfuture anteriorI was to read /I was going to read /I would read

Putting it all together

A comparison of forms
ConstructionEastern glossWestern gloss
present optative: non-past optative: non-past
imperfect optative: pastoptative: past
aoristindicative: preteriteindicative: preterite
imperativeimperativeimperative
ge / k- plus simple presentconditional: non-past indicative: present; conditional: present
ge / k- plus simple imperfectconditional: pastindicative: imperfect; conditional: past
bidi / piti plus simple presentnecessitative: non-past indicative: future
bidi / piti plus simple imperfectnecessitative: pastindicative: future perfect; conditional
future participle -lu plus em reflex
'
indicative: futurenecessitative: non-past
future participle -lu plus ēi reflex
'
indicative: future perfectnecessitative: past
past active participle plus em reflex
/
indicative: present perfectindicative: non-past perfect
past active participle plus ēi reflex
/
indicative: past perfectindicative: past perfect
present participle -um plus em reflex
'
indicative: present--
present participle -um plus ēi reflex
'
indicative: imperfect--

There are two tables, showing the full conjugation of each dialect's verb paradigms, Eastern and Western.