This article discusses the conjugation of verbs in a number of varieties of the Occitan language, including Old Occitan and Catalan. Each verbal form is accompanied by its phonetic transcription. The similarities with Catalan are more noticeable in the written forms than in pronunciation.
This is the group most Occitan verbs belong to. Examples include ("to love"), ("to wait" and "to hope"), ("to eat") and ("to think").
This verb is conjugated like ; but in the first-person singular, second-person singular, third-person singular, and third-person plural present (both indicative and subjunctive) and second-person singular imperative tenses, its stems changed to (). This change also happened on verbs such as where the stems change to (). However, most of the online sources most likely only give the conjugations in the Languedocian dialect.
This is the second regular group of verbs, and also the second largest. Examples include ("to finish"), ("to leave"), ("to flee") and ("to die"). Even though the latter three normally give , and at the third person singular of present indicative, in a number of parts of Occitania they will also be declined using the augment, thus giving , and .
These verbs have a basic stem () and an extended stem (), in which the augment derives from the Latin inchoative suffix .
This is the third regular group of verbs in the Occitan language. The letter immediately before the -re ending is always a consonant. Examples include ("to lose"), ("to receive"), ("to harvest") and ("to follow"). If the consonant is a b or a g, then the third person singular of present indicative will be spelt with a p or a c instead. Consequently, and will give and while and will become and , respectively.