Impersonal verbs are verbs which don’t have a subject.
Impersonal verbs
‘It is snowing’ is an example of an impersonal verb. There is no subject – ‘it’ is the subject, but you don’t really know what ‘it’ refers to.
‘Es gibt’ is the most important impersonal construction. It means ‘there is’ or ‘there are’.
Sentences using ‘Es gibt’
- Es gibt ein Kino in der Stadtmitte -> There is a cinema in the town centre.
- Es gibt nicht viel zu tun in Horley -> There is not much to do in Horley.
- Es gibt 32 Schüler in der Klasse -> There are 32 pupils in the class.
In the past, ‘es gibt’ becomes ‘es gab’:
- Es gab gestern eine Party -> There was a party yesterday.
- Gestern gab es ein Gewitter -> Yesterday there was a storm (note the verb second rule in action).
Other verbs that take ‘es’
Common verbs that take ‘es’ include:
- Schneien (to snow) -> Es schneit. (It’s snowing/It snows)
- Regnen (to rain) -> Es regent (It’s raining/It rains)
- Donnern (to thunder) -> Es donnert (It’s thundering/It thunders
- Frieren (to be freezing) -> Es friert (It’s freezing/It freezes)
- Schmecken (to taste) -> Es schmeckt (It is tasty)
- Weh tun (to hurt) -> Es tut weh (It hurts)
- Gehen (to go/to be fine) -> Es geht (It’s ok)
Perfect tense
- Pronoun/noun – The impersonal ‘es’ is the pronoun.
- Auxiliary verb – As usual, ‘haben’ or ‘sein’. But as you only have ‘es‘ as the subject, it has to be ‘hat’ or ‘ist’.
- Past participle – Formed in the normal way.
Examples
- Es hat gestern geregnet -> It rained yesterday.
- Es hat geschmeckt -> It was tasty.
Imperfect tense
Some verbs would be more commonly used in the imperfect, such as ‘leid tun’.
Examples
- Es tut mir leid (I’m sorry) -> Es tat mir leid (I was sorry)
- Es tut weh (It hurts) -> Es tat weh (It hurt)
Common mistakes made by English speakers
- Using ‘der ist’ (which sounds like ‘there is’) instead of ‘es gibt’.