I assume what you call past progressive tense is that we French call passé composé.
J'ai conjugué
tu as conjugué
il / elle a conjugué,
nous avons conjugué,
vous avez conjugué,
ils / elles ont conjugué.
Link goes to "how to conjugate conjuguer".
To conjugate "conjuguer" in the past progressive tense in French, you would use the auxiliary verb "Γͺtre" in the imperfect tense followed by the present participle of "conjuguer," which is "conjuguant." For example, "J'Γ©tais en train de conjuguer" means "I was conjugating."
The five progressive tenses in English are: present progressive (e.g., I am eating), past progressive (e.g., She was watching), future progressive (e.g., They will be sleeping), present perfect progressive (e.g., We have been studying), and past perfect progressive (e.g., He had been working).
tense
Progressive tenses are formed by combining a form of "to be" with the present participle (-ing form) of the verb. For example, in the simple present progressive, add "is", "am", or "are" before the present participle. In the past progressive, use "was" or "were" before the present participle.
Yes, "You were speaking" is an example of the past progressive tense, which indicates an ongoing action that was happening in the past. The present progressive tense would be "You are speaking."
The future progressive tense of "attend" is "will be attending."
The verb suggested is suggérer.You would have to conjugate it and put it in the past tense.
The five progressive tenses in English are: present progressive (e.g., I am eating), past progressive (e.g., She was watching), future progressive (e.g., They will be sleeping), present perfect progressive (e.g., We have been studying), and past perfect progressive (e.g., He had been working).
Well, the dictionary verb is ^etre, and then you have to conjugate it to the noun you're using and the tense and form.
Progressive tenses are formed by combining a form of "to be" with the present participle (-ing form) of the verb. For example, in the simple present progressive, add "is", "am", or "are" before the present participle. In the past progressive, use "was" or "were" before the present participle.
present tense past tense future tense present perfect tense past perfect tense future perfect tense present progressive tense past progressive tense future progressive tense present perfect progressive tense past perfect progressive tense future perfect progressive tense
depends on what the verb ends in, and what tense you want to conjugate in.
tense
tense
Yes, "You were speaking" is an example of the past progressive tense, which indicates an ongoing action that was happening in the past. The present progressive tense would be "You are speaking."
The past progressive tense has two forms: simple past progressive (e.g., "I was reading") and past perfect progressive (e.g., "I had been reading"). Both forms indicate an ongoing action in the past.
No My answer: its past tense is "could".
The past progressive tense of "study" is "was/were studying."