A1

-IRE Verbs with -isc-

Verbi in -IRE con -isc-

-IRE Verbs with -isc- in Italian

Overview

Most Italian verbs ending in -ire follow a regular conjugation pattern you may already know. However, a large group of -ire verbs insert -isc- between the stem and the ending in certain forms of the present tense. These are sometimes called "isc verbs" or "third conjugation verbs with -isc- infix."

The -isc- insertion happens in the singular forms (io, tu, lui/lei) and the third person plural (loro). The first and second person plural (noi, voi) remain regular. This pattern is not an exception — it is actually more common than the regular -ire pattern. Verbs like finire (to finish), capire (to understand), preferire (to prefer), and spedire (to send) all follow this pattern.

Understanding which -ire verbs take -isc- is essential at the A1 level because these verbs appear constantly in everyday Italian.

How It Works

Conjugation Pattern

Using finire (to finish) as the model verb:

Person Pronoun Regular -ire (dormire) -isc- verb (finire)
1st singular io dormo finisco
2nd singular tu dormi finisci
3rd singular lui/lei dorme finisce
1st plural noi dormiamo finiamo
2nd plural voi dormite finite
3rd plural loro dormono finiscono

Notice that noi and voi forms are identical to regular -ire verbs. The -isc- infix only appears where the stress falls on the ending.

Common -isc- Verbs

Verb Meaning Example (io)
finire to finish finisco
capire to understand capisco
preferire to prefer preferisco
spedire to send spedisco
pulire to clean pulisco
costruire to build costruisco
guarire to heal guarisco
unire to unite unisco
colpire to hit/strike colpisco
suggerire to suggest suggerisco

Comparison with Regular -ire

The key difference lies in the singular and third person plural forms:

  • Regular: io dormo, tu dormi, lui dorme, loro dormono
  • -isc-: io finisco, tu finisci, lui finisce, loro finiscono
  • Same: noi finiamo / dormiamo, voi finite / dormite

There is no reliable rule to determine which -ire verbs take -isc-. You must learn this as a property of each verb. However, most -ire verbs do take the -isc- infix — regular -ire verbs like dormire, partire, and sentire are actually the minority.

Examples in Context

Italian English Note
Finisco il lavoro alle cinque. I finish work at five. 1st person singular with -isc-
Non capisco questa parola. I don't understand this word. Very common in daily speech
Lui preferisce il tè al caffè. He prefers tea over coffee. 3rd person singular
Spedisci la lettera domani? Are you sending the letter tomorrow? 2nd person singular
I bambini capiscono tutto. The children understand everything. 3rd person plural -iscono
Noi puliamo la casa ogni sabato. We clean the house every Saturday. Noi form — no -isc-
Voi finite sempre tardi. You always finish late. Voi form — no -isc-
Preferisco restare a casa stasera. I prefer to stay home tonight. Common preference expression
Il dottore guarisce i pazienti. The doctor heals the patients. 3rd person singular
Costruiscono un nuovo ponte. They are building a new bridge. 3rd person plural
Non capisco, puoi ripetere? I don't understand, can you repeat? Useful classroom phrase
Suggerisco di partire presto. I suggest leaving early. Giving advice
Uniscono le due squadre. They are joining the two teams. 3rd person plural

Common Mistakes

Forgetting -isc- in singular and 3rd plural

  • Wrong: Io finio il libro.
  • Right: Io finisco il libro.
  • Why: Finire requires -isc- in the io, tu, lui/lei, and loro forms. Without it, the verb is incorrectly conjugated.

Adding -isc- to noi and voi forms

  • Wrong: Noi finisciamo alle tre.
  • Right: Noi finiamo alle tre.
  • Why: The -isc- infix is never used with noi or voi. These forms follow the standard -ire pattern.

Using -isc- with regular -ire verbs

  • Wrong: Io dormisco bene.
  • Right: Io dormo bene.
  • Why: Not all -ire verbs take -isc-. Dormire, partire, sentire, and aprire are regular -ire verbs.

Misspelling the -isc- forms

  • Wrong: Tu capisci written as Tu capisci
  • Right: Tu capisci
  • Why: The spelling follows Italian phonetic rules: "sci" before e/i produces the "sh" sound. Pay attention to the exact letter patterns.

Confusing -isco and -esco

  • Wrong: Io finesco.
  • Right: Io finisco.
  • Why: The infix is always -isc-, never -esc-. The vowel is always "i."

Practice Tips

  1. Start by memorizing the six forms of finire as your anchor verb. Once you have the pattern, apply it to capire, preferire, and other -isc- verbs — the endings are always the same.
  2. When you encounter a new -ire verb, check whether it takes -isc-. A good habit is to look up the "io" form: if it ends in -isco, all the other -isc- forms follow automatically.
  3. Practice by creating sentences that contrast regular and -isc- verbs: "Io dormo e poi finisco il libro" — this reinforces which verbs use which pattern.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Regular -IRE VerbsA1

More A1 concepts

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