No, "mourir" is not a regular -ir verb. It is an irregular verb that belongs to the third group of French verbs. Its conjugation does not follow the standard patterns of regular -ir verbs, as it has unique forms in different tenses. For example, in the present tense, it is conjugated as "je meurs," "tu meurs," "il/elle meurt," etc.
A French regular verb is a verb that follows a common conjugation pattern. Regular verbs typically end in -er, -ir, or -re and conjugate predictably according to their verb group. Examples of regular verbs in French include "aimer" (to love), "finir" (to finish), and "vendre" (to sell).
The verb to choose is choisir. It is a regular -ir verb (2nd group), conjugated like finir. Therefore,I choose -- je choisis -- "zhuh shwah-zee"
Adjective: mort Noun: le mort Verb (to die): mourir
The prefix that goes in front of "regular" is "ir-".
Ir- can be a prefix for regular: irregular.
First off, "la mort" is a noun (death). The verb is "mourir" (to die) and you can see a full conjugation table here.
Finir is the infinitive of the verb to finish in French.
dead is the irregular etre verb mourir so to say he is dead it would be il est mort
ir- irregular
There are three types of regular verbs: -er, -ir, and -re For an -er verb such as aimer (to like/love) you begin to conjugate the verb by removing the ending , -er, and leaving just the stem of the verb, aim. Regular -er verb endings are: -e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent. Depending on the subject you are conjugating for determines which ending is to be used. For other regular verbs you do the same process of detaching the endig from the stem and adding the respective ending. -ir verb endings are: -is, -is, -it, -issons, -issez, -issent. -re verb endings are: -s, -s,-(no ending), -ons, -ez, -ent.
Finir is a regular -ir verb. je finis tu finis il/elle/on finit nous finissons vous finissez ils/elles finissent
It depends on the verb and on the tense. There are third forms for verb - regular verbs finishing by -er - regular verbs finishing by - ir - The third form for all irregular verbs. (irregular verbs finishing by -ir and those finishing by - endre, -oitre, -oudre, -ettre, -aître, -uire, and much more) Conjugation in french is much harder than in English. Most of the time, when you use "vous" the verb is finishing by "- ez" at the present tense - iez imperfect - by utes at the pretérit - by "-rez" at the future