Conjugator is a tool/library that allows you to inflect and conjugate Spanish verbs. There are plans for the future to expand to other languages as well, but for now, it is only Spanish.
To install, simply get it from npm:
npm install conjugator
or from github:
git clone [email protected]:ehoogerbeets/conjugator.git
Without parameters, the conjugator will conjugate all verbs it knows about to all moods, tenses, numbers, and persons. That's probably not what you want, though.
The basic operation is to give the infinitive form of the verb on the command-line and it will conjugate that particular verb to all its moods, tenses, numbers, and persons:
> conjugator ir
{
"indicative": {
"present": {
"singular": {
"first": "voy",
"second": "vas",
"third": "va"
},
"plural": {
"first": "vamos",
"second": "vais",
"third": "van"
}
},
[...]
"imperative": {
"affirmative": {
"singular": {
"second": "¡Ve!",
"third": "¡Vaya!"
},
"plural": {
"first": "¡Vayamos!",
"second": "¡Id!",
"third": "¡Vayan!"
}
},
"negative": {
"singular": {
"second": "¡No vayas!",
"third": "¡No vaya!"
},
"plural": {
"first": "¡No vayamos!",
"second": "¡No vayáis!",
"third": "¡No vayan!"
}
}
}
}
>
The output is pretty-printed json. You can also get a cleaner line-by-line form by giving the "list" argument as well:
> conjugator ir list
voy
vas
va
vamos
vais
van
iba
ibas
iba
íbamos
[...]
To see the personal pronouns that go along with the verb forms, give the "pronouns" argument:
> conjugator ir list pronouns
yo voy
tú vas
él va
nosotros vamos
vosotros vais
ellos van
yo iba
tú ibas
él iba
nosotros íbamos
[...]
To filter the list of inflections, just give the name of the moods, tenses, numbers, or persons you want to filter by. You may specify the arguments in any order. Only the first parameter (the infinitive verb form) has to be first, and the rest of the arguments are free form. For example, to see only the present, first person forms, with pronouns:
> conjugator comer first pronouns present
{
"indicative": {
"present": {
"singular": {
"first": "yo como"
},
"plural": {
"first": "nosotros comemos"
}
}
},
"subjunctive": {
"present": {
"singular": {
"first": "yo coma"
},
"plural": {
"first": "nosotros comamos"
}
}
},
"conditional": {
"present": {
"singular": {
"first": "yo comería"
},
"plural": {
"first": "nosotros comeríamos"
}
}
},
"imperative": {
"affirmative": {
"plural": {
"first": "¡Nosotros comamos!"
}
}
}
}
[...]
Here are the list of moods that conjugator supports:
- indicative
- subjunctive
- conditional
- imperative
Here are the tenses supported:
- present
- imperfect
- preterite
- future
- perfect
- pluperfect
- future perfect
- preterite perfect
- imperfect -ra
- imperfect -se
Here are the numbers supported:
- singular - "I", "he", "she", "you" (singular)
- plural - "we", "you" (plural), "they"
Here are the persons supported:
- first - "I" and "we"
- second - "you"
- third - "he", "she", and "they"
Here are the positivities supported (only applicable to the imperative mood)
- affirmative
- negative
Note that not all combinations are valid. For example, there is no "imperative" mood with the "future perfect" tense. If you filter by that, you will get nothing in return.
There are a number of parameters that affect the style of pronouns supported. For example, in some styles of Spanish, like that spoken in Argentina near the Rio Plata, the second person singular informal form is "vos" (you). In other forms of Spanish, the second person singular informal form is "tú" (you).
Similarly, some styles of Spanish recognize formality and some do not. For example, in Spain where they do recognize formality, the second person plural formal form is "ustedes", and the informal form is "vosotros".
Here are the possible styles of Spanish that are supported:
- castillano (default) - Spanish as spoken in Spain
- rioplatense - spoken near the Rio Plata (Argentina and Uruguay)
- chileano - spoken in Chile
- centroamericano - spoken in Central America (Costa Rica, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Guatamala, etc.)
- mexicano - spoken in Mexico
- caribeno - spoken in the Caribbean (Puerto Rico, Cuba, Dominican Republic, etc.)
- andino - spoken in the Andes of northern South America (Peru, Ecuador, etc.)
Here are the formalities supported:
- formal - In Spain Spanish, use "usted" for the second person singular and "ustedes" for the second person plural
- informal - In Spain Spanish, use "tú" for the second person singular and "vosotros" for the second person plural
If you do not specify a formality, it will use the formality style that is appropriate for the style of Spanish.
The default is to use masculine forms for the pronouns. If you would like other forms, you can specify the gender on the command-line. Here are the genders supported:
- masculine - use "he" and "they" (masculine)
- feminine - use "she" and "they" (feminine)
- inanimate - use "it" and "they" (inanimate -- same as masculine)
You can use conjugator in your own code and retrieve the same json object that is pretty-printed on the screen when you use the command-line interface. Example:
var conjugateVerb = require("conjugator/lib/conjugateVerb.js");
var comerConjugation = conjugateVerb("comer");
console.log("The first person plural future subjunctive is: " +
comerConjugation.subjunctive.future.plural.first);
You can filter the results by passing a second "options" argument:
var conjugateVerb = require("conjugator/lib/conjugateVerb.js");
var comerConjugation = conjugateVerb("comer", {
mood: "indicative",
tense: "present"
});
console.log("The first person plural present indicative is: " +
comerConjugation.indicative.present.plural.first);
If you would like to get only a particular inflection of a verb, you can use the "inflect" function. The conjugateVerb function above calls inflect multiple times to get each of the forms, but you can call inflect directly:
var inflect = require("conjugator/lib/inflect.js");
var comerForm = inflect("comer", {
mood: "indicative",
tense: "present",
number: "plural",
person: "first"
});
console.log("The first person plural present indicative is: " + comerForm);
Note that if any of the above 4 options are not given, inflect will use the default for that option and return only one form of the verb. The difference between conjugateVerb and inflect is that conjugateVerb will iterate through all the possible values for the missing filters and return an object containing all of these forms, whereas inflect only ever returns a particular form.
New PRs are welcome!
If you would like to update the code to fix bugs or, even better, add support for another language, please go right ahead!
If you found some regular verbs or verb exceptions we didn't cover, please update the data/exceptions.json file and submit it. Note that any verb that is not listed in the regular or exception files will have the normal -ar, -ir, or -er rules applied to it as appropriate.
Also note that the property hierarchy of the exceptions json is similar to the output from the code itself and new submissions must follow the same pattern. Only the exceptional cases are needed. Cases not listed will be generated according to the regular rules. The hierarchy is:
{
"infinitive form of the verb": {
"moods": {
"tenses": {
"numbers": {
"persons": "value"
}
}
}
}
}
Example entry in the data/exceptions.json:
{
"ver": {
"past participle": "visto",
"indicative": {
"present": {
"singular": {
"first": "veo"
},
"plural": {
"second": "veis"
}
},
"preterite": {
"singular": {
"first": "vi",
"third": "vio"
}
}
},
"subjunctive": {
"present": {
"singular": {
"first": "vea",
"second": "veas",
"third": "vea"
},
"plural": {
"first": "veamos",
"second": "veáis",
"third": "vean"
}
}
},
"imperative": {
"affirmative": {
"singular": {
"third": "vea"
},
"plural": {
"first": "veamos"
}
},
"negative": {
"singular": {
"second": "veas",
"third": "vea"
},
"plural": {
"first": "veamos",
"second": "veáis",
"third": "vean"
}
}
}
}
}
All other cases not listed above are generated per the regular rules.
Note that at any level, if all of the values underneath there are the same thing, then the level does not need to contain a subobject. It can just have a string value. For example, if a particular singular imperative form of a verb is the same for all of the first, second, and third persons, then you can just put:
[...]
"imperative": {
"singular": "verb form"
},
[...]
Instead of spelling it all out like this:
[...]
"imperative": {
"singular": {
"first": "verb form",
"second": "verb form",
"third": "verb form"
}
},
[...]
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