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Yes!

Did you think because it was Friday I wouldn’t write a lengthy analysis of verbs in
Romanian? :P
To recap, please read part 1. In fact, if you’re just a beginner and learning Romanian,
read no further because part 1 will get you by in almost all situations.
Only if you’re truly interested in understanding and conjugating verbs should you read
what follows!

Imperfect
The first tense to talk about is referred to as the “Imperfect” at this link for the verb
“vorbi” or “to talk/speak”.
The imperfect is a past tense that implies a sort of “fixed” past. In other words, it
remained in the past in a definite, solid way.
Example: Ieri eu vorbeam cu Maria.
From part 1 though you saw the “past perfect” which would simply be:
Ieri eu am vorbit cu Maria
What’s the difference? Well the first one is “Yesterday I spoke” while the second one is
technically “Yesterday I had spoken”.
Nonetheless, Romanians tend to use the second form (eu am vorbit) about 90% of the
time and the imperfect only about 10% of the time.
TO TALK/SPEAK VORBI
eu vorbeam
tu vorbeai
el/ea vorbea
noi vorbeam
voi vorbeati
ei/ele vorbeau
.
Since you see once again the I/we forms are the same, this needs clarification.
Since the past perfect (eu am vorbit) forms are much easier to use, you can rely on them
exclusively and always be understood.
Again there is also a second past perfect tense (eu vorbisem) that is only used in Oltenia
and again, you can be understood relying solely on the easier past tense form (eu am
vorbit).

Conditional Present
This one can be a little tricky for (native) English speakers.
Nonetheless, in English it would generally be any time the phrase “would like” is used in
conjunction with a verb – ie “If John comes, I would like to go to the party”. That right
there is the conditional tense.
TO TALK/SPEAK VORBI
eu as vorbi
tu ai vorbi
el/ea ar vorbi
noi am vorbi
voi ati vorbi
ei/ele ar vorbi
.
Therefore roughly speaking, Eu as vorbi cu Maria means “I would like to speak to Maria”.
This tense is fairly easy to conjugate and is especially used in polite situations. Imagine if
you are in a restaurant, about to order some food. Instead of saying “I want “(doresc)
you would use the conditional tense (asi dori) to say “I would like”.

Conditional Perfect
Used extremely rarely, this is equivalent to saying “would be” + the verb’s participle. In
the case of vorbi or “to talk/speak”, the conditional perfect tense would become “would
be spoken”.

Imperative
This is the tense you use when addressing someone directly and issuing a command.
If you were facing a prisoner and commanding him, “Speak!” this would be the
imperative tense (think of the similar word “emperor” if it helps you to remember it).
The good news is that there are only two forms, tu (familiar) you and voi (formal/plural)
you.
The formal/plural version is always the same as the present tense for “voi”. Therefore
“voi vorbiti” is “you (formal/plural) speak” and “voi vorbiti!” is the way you command
someone formal/plural to speak. Easy, peezy.
The tu form in some verbs is the same as he/she/it present tense and sometimes the tu
present tense. How do you know which one it will be? You don’t. For vorbi, it happens
to be the he/she/it form, so tu vorbesti is you speak but vorbeste! is how I order tu to
speak.
Note: One common verb, veni (to come), has an unusual tu form in the imperative:
Vino! is how you say “you come (here)!” while “you are coming” is simply “tu vii”.
The voi version is the same in both imperative and present tenses (veniti).

Subjunctive
Many English speakers have no idea there is a subjunctive tense in English. Well, there
is. And because it is so poorly understood in English, it’s difficult to explain how to use it
in Romanian.
The good news is understanding it is super easy because it is virtually identical to the
present tense:
PRESENT SUBJUNCTIVE
eu vorbesc vorbesc
tu vorbesti vorbesti
el/ea vorbeste vorbeasca
noi vorbim vorbim
voi vorbiti vorbiti
ei/ele vorbesc vorbeasca
.
So you can see it only varies in the he/she/it and the they forms, so many times you’re
reading/hearing the subjunctive tense and you don’t even know it.
The most common use in Romanian of the subjunctive (besides the future tense) is
when you’re stringing two verbs together with “sa” in between them.
Kurzii refuza sa vorbeasca
This means “The Kurds refuse to speak”. In English this is done by “present tense verb1 +
infinitive verb2” while in Romanian this is “present tense + sa + present subjunctive”.
Again, for me singularly, it would be “Eu refuz sa vorbesc” for “I refuse to speak” which
seems like the present tense (twice) but the second one is actually the subjunctive, it’s
just written identically.
Note: Romanian syntax allows for the subjunctive verb to be split from the original
present tense verb.
Cum invata copiii sa vorbeasca?
Literally “How learn the children to speak?” where the subjunctive form (vorbeasca) is
separated from the verb “invata” (to learn) by the “receiving” noun in the sentence,
copiii (the children).

Other Tenses
I would say that the “past subjunctive”, the “simple perfect” and Future III” are used so
infrequently that they are not worth learning unless you want to start writing poetry.
The one labeled “Future II popular” is used in Romanian except it’s only for some
unusual cases. It’s also fairly easy to understand because the bits are once we’ve seen
before.
Eu am sa fi vorbit means something like “I should be spoken” referring to the future. So I
guess you could say “Maine discursul are sa fi vorbit” to say “Tomorrow the discussion
should be spoken” but it’s only for certain situations.
Maine tema are sa fi completat means “Tomorrow the homework should be
completed”.
And that’s really about it! Once you get the hang of all of these tenses, you can
conjugate Romanian verbs on the fly with ease.
Looking over at the DEX entry for the same verb (vorbi) and click on “conjugari”, you’ll
see it has the tenses arranged (and named) a little differently.
Several tenses are “missing”, including the easy past, because it’s assumed you know
that you add (eu am) plus the participle (vorbit), which is given to you.
The “conjunctive present” is super handy though because it shows you the easy future
tense (eu + o sa + vorbesc) plus it’s identical with the (present) subjunctive tense.
The “perfect simplu” and the “mai mult ca perfect” you can essentially ignore, including
some of the regional variants listed in blue.

Long Infinitive
When a verb in Romanian becomes a noun, this is known as the “long infinitive”. In
English it’s usually formed by adding +ing, which can be confusing.
Therefore “to speak” is vorbi but “speaking” the noun is vorbire. Therefore “vorbire in
public” is “public speaking”.
Note: the “long infinitive” for the verb “to be” is fire (being) and has a number of other,
special uses.

Gerund
This one is also tough for (native) English speakers because it is also the +ing form in
English. The problem is that many times, in the present tense, English speakers use the
gerund when in Romanian it would be the (ordinary) present tense.
Example: “He is speaking” in Romanian is el vorbeste, simply “he speaks”.
But there is a gerund form in Romanian, in this verb’s case being vorbind.
So when do you use it? Well either when a verb is ongoing, especially when it continues
onto other verbs (as in an adverbial phrase), or else sometimes in the abstract sense. It’s
hard to nail down an exact time of when you use it and when you don’t.
I guess the easiest “rule of thumb” is that if using the present tense seems incredibly
awkward, then and only then use the gerund.
AND NOW YOU KNOW! ROMANESTE ARE SA FI VORBIT!

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