dépêche-toi is the imperative. The imperative is like the present, in the 'you' conjugations (except that for 'er' verbs, you take out the final 's': the tip we give to French students is that this is an order, so taking the 's' out makes it shorter, so you'll have to obey faster)
"I will be" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Je serai. The pronunciation of the first person singular subject pronoun and the future indicative tense will be "zhuh sreh" in northerly French and "zhuh suh-reh" in southerly French.
Presnt tense: j'ai Nous avons Tu as Vous avez Il/Elle a Ils/Elles ont
Some examples: Past tense - worked. Future tense - will work. Past tense - played. Future tense - will play. Past tense - lied. Future tense - will lie.
The word industry doesn't have a past tense or a present tense as it is a noun.
The past tense of "to occur" is occurred.
The past tense of the French word "est" is "était."
The past tense of the French verb "jouer" is "joué."
"Voyez" is a form of the French verb "voir" in the second person plural, present tense. It means "you see" or "you are seeing."
''Était''
A different French word... :D You change the ending of a verb in the past tense.
"Ate" is not a French word...But the past tense for "eat" in French is "mangé".
regardé (goes with avoir, totally regular)
save is "sauver" Ex: Tu as sauvé ma vie. (You saved my life.)
The conjugated form of "avoir" and "fait." Example: Tu as fait ton devoir.
The verb "will study" is in the future tense in the sentence "Yolanda will study French next year."
I have - J'ai You have - Tu as / Vous avez She / He has - Elle / Il a We have - Nous avons They have - Ils / Elles ont
It is a type of past tense. There are 3 past tenses in French: le passé composé (perfect tense), l'imparfait and le passé simple. Le passé simple is no longer used a part from in literary works and the other two are the most common, with different uses based on the context and the meaning you wish to convey.In short, yes. The perfect tense is one of the French past tenses.