Verb conjugator

Filipino verb conjugation tables

Type any Filipino verb, or pick one of 16 common ones, and see it fully conjugated in the present, past and future, for every person. The built-in verbs are the ones you meet first and use most, regular and irregular.

Quick answer

Filipino verb conjugation is how a verb changes its ending, and sometimes its stem, to match the subject and the tense. This free tool lays out full tables for 16 of the most common Filipino verbs across 4 core tenses. Pick a verb like maging (to be, to become) or magkaroon (to have, to acquire), or type any Filipino verb of your own to conjugate it on the spot.

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Or conjugate any Filipino verb

Showing maging (to be, to become) · irregular (closest equivalent of "to be")

maging

to be, to become irregular (closest equivalent of "to be")
Infinitive
ako maging
ikaw maging
siya maging
kami maging
tayo maging
kayo maging
sila maging
Completed
ako naging
ikaw naging
siya naging
kami naging
tayo naging
kayo naging
sila naging
Incompleted
ako nagiging
ikaw nagiging
siya nagiging
kami nagiging
tayo nagiging
kayo nagiging
sila nagiging
Contemplated
ako magiging
ikaw magiging
siya magiging
kami magiging
tayo magiging
kayo magiging
sila magiging

Learn Filipino verbs faster by reading them in context

Tables get you started, but verbs stick when you meet them in real sentences. Lingo7 lets you read real books in Filipino with sentence-aligned translation and native-narrated audio, so you see these forms again and again where they actually live. Tap any word to save it, then review it later. Free to start.

How Filipino conjugation works

To conjugate a verb is to change its form to show who is doing the action (the subject) and when (the tense). In each table above, the subject runs down the left and the matching form sits beside it, across 4 core tenses: Infinitive, Completed, Incompleted, Contemplated.

Verbs split into regular and irregular. Regular verbs follow a fixed pattern you can apply to thousands of others once you learn it; the badge on each verb names its type (irregular (closest equivalent of "to be") for maging, for example). Irregular verbs like magkaroon (to have, to acquire) change in ways you memorize one by one, which is exactly why the most common verbs are so often the most irregular.

You do not learn these by staring at the grid. You learn them by meeting them, over and over, in real sentences until the pattern feels obvious. That is what reading does, and it is what reading in Lingo7 is built for: open a real book in Filipino, tap any verb form to see its meaning, and the conjugations start to stick on their own.

Frequently asked questions

How do you conjugate Filipino verbs?

To conjugate a Filipino verb, you change its form to match the subject and the tense. Take maging (to be, to become): in the ako form it is maging now, naging in the past, and nagiging in the future. Regular verbs follow a fixed pattern by ending; irregular ones you learn one at a time. This tool shows the full table for each.

What are the most common Filipino verbs?

The most common Filipino verbs include maging (to be, to become), magkaroon (to have, to acquire), pumunta (to go), kumain (to eat), uminom (to drink), sumulat (to write), bumili (to buy), umalis (to leave, to go away). These high-frequency verbs are also the most irregular in most languages, which is why they are worth drilling first. This tool has full present, past and future tables for all 16.

Is Filipino verb conjugation hard?

Filipino conjugation takes practice but follows clear rules. Regular verbs are predictable once you learn the endings; the real work is the handful of very common irregular verbs and knowing which tense to use. Filipino is FSI Category III, about 1100 hours to professional proficiency. The fastest way to make the forms automatic is to meet them again and again in real sentences, which is what reading does.

How many tenses does Filipino have?

These three, Infinitive, Completed, Incompleted, Contemplated, are the core of everyday Filipino and the right place to start. Real Filipino also uses other moods and aspects (and, in most languages, extra compound tenses), but they build on the same stems and personal endings you see in these tables.