We’re going to start with a verb I already conjugated for you. It doesn’t belong to any of the three classes I named last time. It is said to have “strong” root letters and it will contrast with verbs that have “weak” root letters which I will discuss soon enough.
Present
Singular
|
Plural
|
Gender
|
מֹשֵל
|
מֹשְלִים
|
Masculine
|
מֹשֶׁלֶת
|
מֹשְׁלוֹת
|
Feminine
|
Past
Singular
|
Plural
|
Person/gender
|
מָשַׁלְתִּי
|
מָשַׁלְנוּ
|
First
|
מָשַׁלְתָּ
|
מְשַלְתֶּם
|
Second/masculine
|
מָשַׁלְתְּ
|
מְשַלְתֶּן
|
Second/feminine
|
מָשַׁל
|
מָשְׁלוּ
|
Third/masculine
|
מָשְׁלָה
|
מָשְׁלוּ
|
Third/feminine
|
Future/aorist
Singular
|
Plural
|
Person/gender
|
אֶמְשֹׁל
|
נִמְשֹׁל
|
First
|
תִּמְשֹׁל
|
תִּמְשְׁלוּ
|
Second/masculine
|
תִּמְשְׁלִי
|
תִּמְשֹׁלְנָה
|
Second/feminine
|
יִמְשֹׁל
|
יִמְשְׁלוּ
|
Third/masculine
|
תִּמְשֹׁל
|
תִּמְשֹׁלְנָה
|
Third/feminine
|
First, the roots of this verb are mem shin lamed. They are present in every tense. That is what makes this a strong verb. Verbs with “weak” letters may lose them in conjugation.
Second, notice that the “past” has no prefixes. That suggests that this is the qal or binyan. For purposes of looking in a dictionary, when you have a strong letter as the first root letter, you look under that in the dictionary.
So if you had a root of qof tet lamed, you would look under qof.
Now notice that the “future/aorist” has prefixes before the mem. They will often appear with a vav at the start, for reasons I’ll discuss later. But you see here all three root letters expressed after a prefix which shows person, number and gender.
Notice the prefixes alef, nun, and yod. Those are the ones we have to address when we have verbs with weak roots in this tense.
© Patricia Jo Heil, 2013-2018 All Rights Reserved
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