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A french GCSE can be hard but generally the government has made it easier all you have to do is have a basic understanding of tenses so present past future imperfect conditional and subjonctife then if you learn the vocabluary for a specific unit that you are doing (media for me) you just piece what you know together and there you are an A in GCSE i am awful at french i mean ive done it for 8 years im 15 and i still struggle but with a bit of revision and some extra help from teachers then i did enough to get an A so tenses, Vocabulary and pronunciation and BONNE CHANCE!!!!
The verbe "avoir" means "to have" in French. But it is also used in composite tenses as auxiliaire ("etre" and "avoir" are the two auxiliaire verbes in French), in tenses such as the passe simple or any other composite tenses. Hope it helps!!
First there are more than 2 different past tenses is French Second they are used as the past tenses in English, to express thing that were during but are finished now, things that were finished in the past, things that happened suddenly, things that happened before other in the past and so on
all of the tenses that exist and that are still in frequent usage, you should've learned them
French students have the equivalent of the GCSEs.
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The tenses are used for verbs, not nouns. Status is a noun.
French verbs can have up to 21 tenses, which includes 8 simple tenses and 13 compound tenses. These tenses help indicate the time at which an action occurs in relation to the present, past, or future.
Ont. If you want to translate even more go to Microsoft Translator.
In French verb tenses, the auxiliary verb is used to form compound tenses. For example, in the passé composé tense, "avoir" or "être" are used as auxiliary verbs. The main verb in French tenses is the verb that carries the main meaning of the sentence.
it is spelt robots in french also, but it is pronounced "robo" in both singular and plural tenses.
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