You know the personal endings -e, -st, -t, -en, -et, -en. Some minor complications might interest you.
"My name is Immanuel". = "Ich heiße Immanuel".
The strange ß here substitutes a double-s.
As a consequence, the second person singular would be written with three "s": heiss-st, but we only keep two of them:
du heißt.
heißen also means "to mean". Max Weber's famous beginning of
"Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft":
"Soziologie soll heißen ..." means "Sociology shall mean..."
Heidegger asks "Was heißt »Sein«?" and, later on, writes an essay with the title: "Was heißt Denken?" Nietzsche says:
"Böse denken heißt böse machen". Note that we use only one verbal form for each tense. The German language does not distinguish between "I do" and "I am doing".
A second interesting verb is "arbeiten" ("to work").
The third person would be arbeit -t, and we put an euphonic "e" in the middle, as we do, for example, in finden.
er, sie, es arbeitet
Now you can understand what the mother in Peter Weiss' novel
"Abschied von den Eltern" says to her son:
"Leben heißt arbeiten, arbeiten, arbeiten und immer wieder arbeiten".
Now you could start learning some important regular verbs as
denken
schreiben
spielen