In Luxembourgish we have regular verbs – reegelméisseg Verben – and irregular verbs – onreegelméisseg Verben and modal verbs. The auxiliary verbs – sinn (to be) & hunn (to have) – are irregular.
The Basics
Each verb has a basic “infinitive” (to) form. This is the form of the verb you find in a Luxembourgish dictionary. The verb to live in English is the infinitive form. The Luxembourgish equivalent is wunnen.
Each verb has 2 parts: the stem and the ending. In the verb wunnen wunn is the stem and en is the ending.
The stem is invariable except in the irregular verbs.
The ending is the flexible part of the verb and changes according to the subject and the tense.
The ending of all the verbs at the infinitive – with the exception of the auxiliary verbs – is –en.
Once you learn the pattern for one regular Luxembourgish verb, you know how all Luxembourgish regular verbs are conjugated. (Yes, there are irregular verbs that don’t always follow the rules, but even they will usually have the same endings as the regular verbs.) The majority of Luxembourgish verbs are regular, even though it may not seem that way since many commonly used verbs are irregular verbs.
Regular Verbs
In this lesson we will only talk about the conjugation in the present tense. The conjugation of the regular verbs always follows the same pattern.
Let’s take for example the conjugation of the verb wunnen (to live) in the present tense:
ech wunnen
du wunns
hien / hatt / si wunnt
mir wunnen
dir wunnt
si wunnen
Irregular Verbs
The conjugation of irregular verbs follows a predictable pattern: only the 2. person singular (du) and 3. person singular (hien, hatt, si) change their stem. That is, the verb changes its stem vowel, but the endings are the same as for any other regular verb in the present tense.
Let’s take for example the conjugation of the verb kommen (to come):
ech kommen
du kënns
hien / hatt / si kënnt
mir kommen
dir kommt
si kommen
Modal Verbs
Luxembourgish has a total of six modal (or “modal auxiliary”) verbs that you will need to know because they’re used all the time. These are
kënnen (to can)
mussen (to must / to have to)
sollen (should / ought to)
däerfen (to may / to be allowed)
wëllen ( to want)
wäerten (will)
Each modal only has two basic forms: singular and plural. This is the most important rule you need to remember about modal verbs in the present tense.
As an example, the verb kënnen has the basic forms kann (singular) and kënnen (plural).
- For the singular pronouns ech, du, hien/hatt/si, you will use kann (du adds its usual -s ending: du kanns).
- For the plural pronouns mir, dir/Dir, si, you will use kënnen (dir/Dir takes its usual -t ending: dir/Dir kënnt).
This means that the modals are actually simpler to conjugate and to use than other Luxembourgish verbs. If you remember that they have only two basic present tense forms, your life will be much easier. All of the modals work the same way: däerfen/däerf, kënnen/kann, mussen/muss, sollen/soll, wëllen/wëll, wäerten/wäert
You can watch this lesson on Youtube!
I will go more in details about the modal verbs in a future lesson.
I hope that this lesson was helpful. If you want to learn Luxembourgish from scratch but you don’t have time to attend classes then my online course Easy Luxembourgish Level 1 is for you!