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nagé is the past tense and that goes with the auxiliary verb "Avoir" but to swim as an infinitive is nager
the infinitive for 'observons' is 'observer'
Its infinitive is to work
Infinitive is not a verb and does not have any tenses.
Fini, mangé, and vendu are the past participles of the French words finir, manger and vendre.Specifically, the present infinitive finir is "to finish". The present infinitive manger means "to eat". The present infinitive vendre translates as "to sell".The pronunciation will be "fee-nee", "mawn-zhey" and "vawn-dyoo" in terms of the past participles and "fee-neer", "mawn-zhey" and "vawn-druh" in terms of the infinitives.
The infinitive is to eat; the past tense is ate; the past participle is eaten; the present participle is eating.
Migrer is just one French equivalent of the infinitive "to migrate" in English.Specifically, the French word is a verb. It is the present form of the infinitive. It will be pronounced "mee-grey" in French.
in the infinitive form the word follow in french is suivre, and in past tense it is suivi. I can't remember the exact conjugation of each form.
infinitive: be past: was/were past participle: been
The infinitive verb form means the same thing in all languages (though not all languages have an infinitive). It is simply the base from of a verb.
infinitive: throw past: threw past participle: thrown ---- infinitive: teach past: taught past participle: taught
As an adjective organisé (masc) organisée (fem.) organisés (mas plural) organisées (fem plural) As a verb (past infinitive tense) organisé