Learning the basics of French/Learn the tenses/Indicative

Present Tense
This is the tense we talk in most often. This is what is happening now as we speak. In French they have one translation for three English phrases. In English, one could say "they were running" in three ways. I run. I do run. or I am running are all translated into French as je cours (this is the French verb to run and it is an irregular verb.)

Regular Verbs
With regular verbs, each verb has a stem, which is the part that is common to all its inflected variants. With a regular verb, you will take the stem and add the ending that agrees with the subject.

For all of the regular verbs you simply drop the ending, either -er, -ir, or -re. For example, the stem for parler is parl (An example of an -er verb, all other regular -er verbs are the same.). This process is the same for -re, -ir, and -er verbs all alike, respectively (i.e. Finir becomes fin, and attendre becomes attend). So the stem for the verb parler (to talk) is parl, and to say I talk, you would simply add the corresponding ending -e. So, I talk in french is je parle.

Verbs ending in -re.
While verbs ending in -re tend to follow this conjugation table, verbs in this group are generally conjugated irregularly.

Irregular Verbs

 * Irregular verbs are verbs that do not follow the rules for regular verbs. In English, they include "to do" (I do, you do, he/she/it does, we do, you do (plural), they do) and in French they include "être" and "avoir" ("to be" and "to have").  They are a little more difficult to learn because they tend not follow rules, but don't let this put you off... It really is worth the effort to learn them off by heart!

We'll take the two french verbs mentioned above, "être" and "avoir", and I'll show you the conjugations for them:


 * Être - To Be
 * Je suis - I am
 * Tu es - You are (singular, informal)
 * Il/Elle est - He/She is
 * On est - One is (very informal)
 * Nous sommes - We are
 * Vous êtes - You are (plural, formal)
 * Ils sont - They are (male or including a male)
 * Elles sont - They are (entirely female)


 * Avoir - To have
 * J'ai - I have
 * Tu as - You have (singular, informal)
 * Il/Elle a - He/She has
 * On a - One has (very formal)
 * Nous avons - We have
 * Vous avez - You have (plural, formal)
 * Ils ont - They have (male or including a male)
 * Elles ont - They have (entirely female)

An other irregular verb :


 * Aller - To go
 * Je vais - I go
 * Tu vas - You go (singular, informal)
 * Il/Elle va - He/She goes
 * On va - One goes (very informal)
 * Nous allons - We go
 * Vous allez - You go (plural, formal)
 * Ils vont - They go (male or including a male)
 * Elles vont - They go (entirely female)

Irregular verbs are also scattered throughout the verbs ending with -er, -ir, and -re. While they may share some aspects of conjugation, their endings are usually different from one stage to another.

Past tense - Passé composé
The past tense indicates that an action occurred in the past. In English, you will see "He had finished...", with French using a similar pattern with "Il a fini..."

Regular verbs
The regular conjugation for the past tense involves conjugating Avoir, and adding the past participle afterwards. This past participle is created by taking the stem of the verb in question (removing the -er, -ir or -re ending) and replacing it with the past tense ending, as shown below:


 * J'ai écouté - I had listened
 * Tu as fini - you had finished
 * il a attendu - he has waited

As you can see, the passé composé ending for the three conjugations are é, i, and u respectivly.

Irregular verbs
The irregular verbs in french have a varying ending for passé composé, and there is no specific method for determing which one to use. As a result, you will need to consult a reference book or memorize them.

As an example, take a look for avoir and etre


 * J'ai eu
 * J'ai été

Être in passé composé
With some verbs in past tense, you need to conjugate them with être instead of avoir - these verbs usually include a change of state. The first line of these verb forms a mimic DR MRS VANDERTRAMP This list is not exclusive, as verbs used in an intrasitive fashion (without a direct object) are also conjugated with être - for example, it is possible to see "Il est fini", which has a different meaning than "Il a fini".

Many anagrams and tricks are used in schools to remember this list of words; particularly the anagram: DR. MRS. VANDERTRAMP

Close Future - futur proche
This tense is used to indicate that something is going to occurr in the near future. This conjugation results in a compound verb; first, aller is conjugated as if it were in the present tense, and is then followed by the infinitive of the original verb. Unlike passé composé, there is no change in the infinitive. Attention in French grammar is not considered a tense but as a grammatical construction.

In English, the literal translation of this tense is "subject is going to..."

Future - Futur simple
This tense involved an action that will occurr in the future (but not necessarily in the near future.)

It is formed by appending the endings below to the infinitive. Some verbs have a minor spelling change when conjugated in this tense; these exceptions must be memorized.