Conjugate verb "porre" in Italian

Conjugation of the verb porre, irregular conjugation     translation to English put, suppose
Auxiliary: avere

All formsIndicativo Conjuntivo Condizionale Imperativo Forme Impersonali

Indicativo

Presente

io pongo
tu poni
lui/lei pone
noi poniamo
voi ponete
loro pongono

Passato Prossimo

io ho posto
tu hai posto
lui/lei ha posto
noi abbiamo posto
voi avete posto
loro hanno posto

Imperfetto

io ponevo
tu ponevi
lui/lei poneva
noi ponevamo
voi ponevate
loro ponevano

Trapassato Prossimo

io avevo posto
tu avevi posto
lui/lei aveva posto
noi avevamo posto
voi avevate posto
loro avevano posto

Futuro

io porrò
tu porrai
lui/lei porrà
noi porremo
voi porrete
loro porranno

Futuro Anteriore

io avrò posto
tu avrai posto
lui/lei avrà posto
noi avremo posto
voi avrete posto
loro avranno posto

Passato Remoto

io posi
tu ponesti
lui/lei pose
noi ponemmo
voi poneste
loro posero

Trapassato Remoto

io ebbi posto
tu avesti posto
lui/lei ebbe posto
noi avemmo posto
voi aveste posto
loro ebbero posto

Conjuntivo

Presente

io ponga
tu ponga
lui/lei ponga
noi poniamo
voi poniate
loro pongano

Passato Prossimo

io abbia posto
tu abbia posto
lui/lei abbia posto
noi abbiamo posto
voi abbiate posto
loro abbiano posto

Imperfetto

io ponessi
tu ponessi
lui/lei ponesse
noi ponessimo
voi poneste
loro ponessero

Trapassato Prossimo

io avessi posto
tu avessi posto
lui/lei avesse posto
noi avessimo posto
voi aveste posto
loro avessero posto

Condizionale

Presente

io porrei
tu porresti
lui/lei porrebbe
noi porremmo
voi porreste
loro porrebbero

Passato

io avrei posto
tu avresti posto
lui/lei avrebbe posto
noi avremmo posto
voi avreste posto
loro avrebbero posto

Imperativo

(tu) poni (Lei) ponga (noi) poniamo (voi) ponete (Loro) pongano

Forme Impersonali

Participio Presente

Singular Plural
Masculino ponente ponenti
Femenino ponente ponenti

Participio Passato

Singular Plural
Masculino posto posti
Femenino posta poste

Gerundio Presente

ponendo

Gerundio Passato

avendo posto
Did you find any mistake or inaccuracy? Please write to us.

Conjugation of Italian verbs

Italian is one of the most widely spoken Romance languages. For native speakers of French and Spanish, almost 90% of Italian words are understandable without a dictionary, so they have no problem expanding their vocabulary. Learning Italian offers numerous opportunities, from travel and cultural exchange to career prospects. One of the crucial aspects of mastering the Italian language is to understand the conjugation of verbs and how to use them correctly. Memorizing all the forms of Italian verbs in all persons, numbers, and tenses is a must to speak and write Italian at a high level.

Try to use the Promt.One Conjugator to find verb forms for all Italian conjugations with one click: -are, -ere, -ire, as well as verb forms with irregular conjugation. The data is displayed on the screen in the form of handy tables. With our tool, you can easily conjugate popular verbs such as pensare, parlare, dovere, sapere, fare, and many others.

Promt.One Conjugator will tell you which auxiliary verb – avere or essere – to use to conjugate your Italian verb, and will give you the correct form of the past participle. Learning the rules of Italian verb conjugation is not as complicated as it seems. Do some practice right away with Promt.One!

How to use the Italian verb conjugator

Enter the infinitive (perdere, lavarsi, piacere) or any other form (so, può) of the Italian verb you are looking for in the search bar. Click on the green button. The Promt.One Conjugator will automatically detect the part of speech. A conjugation table for the verb will be opened. If the word you have entered matches several parts of speech (fine, rose, marco), the service will give you all the options available. Remember that the more often you refer the conjugation tables, the faster you will remember the correct forms of Italian verbs.

Italian Nouns and Adjectives

In Italian, nouns can be masculine or feminine, and adjectives match nouns in number and gender. For example, "un libro interessante" (an interesting book) and "due libri interessanti" (two interesting books). With Promt.One, you can easily check the feminine and plural forms of Italian adjectives.

Promt.One is your reliable assistant in mastering the Italian language. Try it today and make sure it works!

Promt.One is a fast and helpful tool for any language learner. Check the conjugation of verbs and see the table of tenses for English, German, Russian, French, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish.