It depends on the verb; avoir conjugates as ai, as, a, avons, avez, ont in the present tense while lancerconjugates as lance, lances, lance, lançons, lancez, lancent. You should look up the verb on wiktionary.org for its conjugation.
They have to agree. If you have a plural subject tehn you have a plural verb form. eg subject - They plural verb form - have eg They have a new car. subject - She singular verb form - has eg She has a new car subject - We plural verb form - like eg We like ice cream subject - He plural verb form - likes eg He likes ice cream
Yes. eg - use = usable. But now useable is not a verb it is an adjective.
For 3rd person singular add an -s to the verb = completes. eg He completes his homework every night. For 3rd person plural the verb remains the same = complete. eg They complete their homework every night
Chew is a verb. Chewed is the past tense form of chew. eg Last night the dog chewed my slipper.
In the present tense: J'offre Tu offres Il offre Nous offrons Vous offrez Ils offrent The futur simple and conditional stem is offrir- The past participle is offert (eg j'ai offert) Imperfect stem is offr-
A finite verb is a verb that has a complete meaning eg I am dancing.while an infinite verb is a verb that deosn't have a complete meaning eg dancing.
A simple verb is only one word eg - run A compound verb is a verb that is made up of more than one word eg - stirfry
in french it means are you... when asking a question... eg es-tu en forme?
Watch can be a verb eg -- We watch TV every night Watch can be a noun eg -- She lost her new watch
They have to agree. If you have a plural subject tehn you have a plural verb form. eg subject - They plural verb form - have eg They have a new car. subject - She singular verb form - has eg She has a new car subject - We plural verb form - like eg We like ice cream subject - He plural verb form - likes eg He likes ice cream
Yes, it is a verb because it's a doing verb. Eg. "he was skulking around"
No. A verb phrase has more than one word eg has been eaten.Are is a be verb
There is a big difference and they are not at all related."are" is a verb, the present plural of the verb to be. eg We are Spanish"your" is a possessive pronoun eg This is your book; it has your name on it
the answer is a noun eg. do you know the anwerit is also a verb eg. i know that answer
An acid base pair which differ from each other by a single proton(H+ ion) is called a conjugate pair. Eg. Acid Base HCl Cl- NH3 NH4+ H2O H3O+
Yes - irritating is the present participle form of the verb irritate. eg That noise is irritating me. Irritating is also an adjective. eg She is an irritating person.
In present simple tense a regular verb (or any verb) has the forms:verb and verb +s eg walk and walksIn present continuous tense a regular verb (or any verb)has the form:verb +ing eg walkingIn present perfect tense a regular verb (or any verb) has the form:have/has + past participleeg have walked and has walked - regular verb,have gone and has gone - irregular verbIn present perfect continuous tense a regular verb (or any verb)has the form:have / has been + verb +ing eg have been walking. has been walking