You mean "venir" ?
At what tense ?
The French verb "venir" (to come) is irregular in conjugation. Here is the conjugation in the present tense:
Conjuguer is a French equivalent of the English word "conjugate."Specifically, the French word is a verb. It is the infinitive in its present form. The pronunciation will be "koh-zhyoo-ghey" in French.
To request: demander (conjugate as a regular -er verb) A request: une demande, une requête
Do you mean the noun or the verb?The noun "wish" is "souhait"The verb "to wish" is: "souhaiter"Obviously you need to conjugate it to your particular usage though.
A thought (noun) is 'une pensée' (feminine noun) in French. To conjugate the verb 'penser' (to think) in French, follow the link.
It depends on the verb; avoir conjugates as ai, as, a, avons, avez, ont in the present tense while lancerconjugates as lance, lances, lance, lançons, lancez, lancent. You should look up the verb on wiktionary.org for its conjugation.
the verb is pleurer so then you have to conjugate it
danser is the verb - you have to conjugate it.
I suggest that you have a look at - www.leconjugueur.com
Conjuguer is a French equivalent of the English word "conjugate."Specifically, the French word is a verb. It is the infinitive in its present form. The pronunciation will be "koh-zhyoo-ghey" in French.
You need to conjugate verbs in most languages. Whether you realize it or not, you conjugate verbs in English as well as in French. Use the French verb "avoir" for example. "j'ai" translates to "I have", and "il a" translates to "he has". If you didn't conjugate it and just left it as "j'avoir" then that would translate to "I to have" which is obviously incorrect.
depends on what the verb ends in, and what tense you want to conjugate in.
The verb suggested is suggérer.You would have to conjugate it and put it in the past tense.
Arguer is a first-group verb (regular verbs ending in 'er) - (check link for the conjugation)
Well, the dictionary verb is ^etre, and then you have to conjugate it to the noun you're using and the tense and form.
In your example, you only conjugate the first main verb. The second verb is in the infinitive. So French for I want to do/make is je veux faire. But sometimes the first main verb can have two parts, such as in the past tenses. In that case, both parts of the first main verb are conjugated. But the second verb remains in the infinitive form. So French for I've wanted to do/make is j'ai voulu faire. However, if the second verb has a different subject then it's conjugated. So French for I want him to do/make is je veux qu'il fasse.
you can say Grandir (i think that this is a verb, so..... conjugate)if this doesn't work, Google wordreference.com
je dustu dusil dutnous dûmesvous dûtesils durent