I suggest that you look at le conjugueur website.
Avior
Avoir and Etre can be used for many sentences, avoir is to have and Etre is to be. Example: J'ai vingt ans, I am twenty. (avoir) Example: Tu es petite, you are small. (etre)
Etre takes avoir as the helping verb. An easy way to remember is that etre is always the helping verb with verbs of coming or going.
Etre is "to be" and it is....... je-suis tu-es il-est nous-sommes vous-etes lis/elles-sont that is how you conjurgate etre YOUR WELCOME and i kno this cuz im a pro french speaker i finished french AVOIR!!
He helps you learn the french verbs in the past tense that use Etre instead of Avoir
The French past tense that's called 'passe compose' is composed of an auxiliary verb and the main verb in past participle form. In the passe compose tense, the auxiliary verb is the conjugation of either 'etre' ['to be'] or 'avoir' ['to have']. Those verbs that have 'avoir' as their auxiliary choice are called 'avoir' verbs. Those verbs that have 'etre' as their auxiliary choice are called 'etre' verbs. For example, 'venir' ['to come'] is an 'etre' verb. So 'I did come, have come, came' is translated as 'Je suis venue', with 'je' meaning 'I'. The choice of 'etre' or 'avoir' carries through to all of the other combined tenses, such as the conditional perfect, future perfect, pluperfect, etc.
You put the etre or avoir in between the pronoun and the verb. For example, 'I played,' you say I, avoir, played. Being J'ai joue(with an accent). Or if you were saying 'he died', you would say il est mort. How to know whether to use avoir or etre: You always use avoir EXCEPT for these; Descendre Retourner Mourir Rentre Sortir Venir Aller Naitre Devenir Entrer Revenir Tomber Rester Arriver Monter Partir You can remember these by using the words DR MRS VANDERTRAMP, if you remember one, its opposite will be there as well ex. to go down, to go up, to come, to leave etc. These ones take etre. Everything else uses avoir.
The phrase 'le verbe avoir' means the verb avoir. In the word-by-word translation, the definite article 'le' means 'the'. The noun 'verbe' means 'verb'. And the verb 'avoir' means 'to have'.
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!!
You use etre for "Dr and Mrs Vandertramp" or "house" verbs. You also use etre for reflexive verbs like se lever, se coucher, se sentir. Don't forget to conjugate etre and use the passe compose end form of the verb (er=e(with accent), re=u, ir=i). The most common etre passe compose is "Je suis ne(e)." = I was born.
Please put your question in a complete sentence.
été and weirdly enough, it goes with avoir. so, j'ai été, tu as été, etc.