Kuwaiti only has two tenses, past and present.
The way of forming each tense is almost always the same, no matter what verb you are using.
The following table shows the different forms of the verb 'to write.'
Past tense
|
Present tense
|
||
I | ana |
katabt
|
aktib
|
You (m) | inta |
katabt
|
tiktib
|
You (f) | intay |
katabtay
|
tiktibiin
|
You (pl) | intaw |
katabtaw
|
tiktibuun
|
We | a7naa |
katabnaa
|
naktib
|
He | uhuwa |
katab
|
yiktib
|
She | ihiya |
katabat
|
tiktib
|
They | uhuma |
katabaw
|
yiktibuun
|
Once you have all the parts in bold committed to memory, all you then have to learn is the past tense root and present tense root of any verb.
What do I mean by this? Well, if you want to say 'I' do something in the present tense, the Kuwaiti word is always going to start with an 'a.' So once you know that the present tense root of the verb 'to write' is ktib, you can easily conjugate aktib ('I write').
And if for example you want to say "they" did something using the past tense, the Kuwaiti word is always going to end in 'aw'. Once you know that the past tense root of the verb 'to write' is katab, you can easily conjugate katabaw ('they wrote').
Earlier I told a white lie when I said there are only two tenses in Kuwaiti. There is indeed a future tense, but you express it simply by putting the word raa7 before any verb in the present tense.
See below:
See below:
Present tense
|
Future tense
|
||
I | ana |
aktib
|
raa7 aktib
|
You (m) | inta |
tiktib
|
raa7 tiktib
|
You (f) | intay |
tiktibiin
|
raa7 tiktibiin
|
You (pl) | intaw |
tiktibuun
|
raa7 tiktibuun
|
We | a7naa |
naktib
|
raa7 naktib
|
He | uhuwa |
yiktib
|
raa7 yiktib
|
She | ihiya |
tiktib
|
raa7 tiktib
|
They | uhuma |
yiktibuun
|
raa7 yiktibuun
|