the verbs of the first group in French are the verbs ending in "er" at the infinitive, which conjugue as "aimer" j'aime tu aimes il, elle aime nous aimons vous aimez ils, elles aiment verbs of the 2nd group are mostly those finishing by "ir" like "finir" the third group is made up the irregular verbs and those finishing by "re" like "prendre" or "perdre", by "oir" like "voir"
examples of 'er' verbs: aimer, diriger, lever, coucher, manger, laver, accepter, penser, donner, quitter, arriver,... the "er" verbs are the first group of verbs in French (those that you conjugue like "aimer"); this is the most important group among the more than 12000 French verbs, so you cannot possibly learn them all.
mechant
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.
I am not sure what you mean by group verbs. Here are a couple of possibilities. This term is most often connected with People Suite, a computer program. In that context, it has nothing to do with grammar. It is sometimes, though rarely, used to refer to verbs whose actions are performed by a collective noun or by a large group, i.e. swarm. Otherwise verbs are sometimes grouped randomly by authors for discussion.
"Could" is part of a special group of verbs known as modal auxiliary verbs. Some other modal verbs are may/might, will/would, shall/should.
Yes, the designation in the third group is on account of irregularities. However, while the first category is "er" verbs, and the second category is "ir" verbs, the third category is not all "re" verbs. A regular "re" verb is Vendre.
examples of 'er' verbs: aimer, diriger, lever, coucher, manger, laver, accepter, penser, donner, quitter, arriver,... the "er" verbs are the first group of verbs in French (those that you conjugue like "aimer"); this is the most important group among the more than 12000 French verbs, so you cannot possibly learn them all.
Unifier (first group verb, conjugates as "aimer"), unir (second group verb, conjugates as "finir").
Arguer is a first-group verb (regular verbs ending in 'er) - (check link for the conjugation)
The "er" suffix is how the infinitive form of the "er" verbs is, this is the reason why they are called "verbes en 'er' " or "verbes du premier group" (verbs of the first group, since this category is the most common).
it makes no sense to conjugue French verbs starting with 'ir'. But the second group of French verbs end with 'ir'. The standard model is 'finir'
There are approximately 12,000 French verbs. This includes regular verbs as well as irregular verbs. French verbs are categorized into three groups based on their infinitive endings: -er, -ir, and -re verbs.
There are 570 irregular verbs out of a total of more than 12,000 French verbs, so more than 95.25% of French verbs are regular.
Oublier is a French verb meaning 'to forget'. Conjugations (1st group, regular 'er' verbs) in link below.
There are approximately 100 irregular avoir verbs in French. These verbs do not follow the regular conjugation pattern in the present tense and require memorization. Other regular verbs in French follow a more predictable conjugation pattern based on their infinitive endings.
Yes, you do. However, in Spanish you can drop the subject whereas French tends to keep them.
baigner