It's "fait" (i think)
Past Participle is "dit"
In Spanish, "mot de passe" means "contraseña," which translates to "password" in English.
Je suis parti Tu es parti il est parti Nous sommes partis Vous êtes partis Ils sont partis
A French verb may have eight tenses. The 'present' is the present tense. The 'imparfait' is the imperfect. The 'passe simple' is the historic/narrative/simple past. The 'futur' is the future. The 'passe compose' is the perfect. The 'plus-que-parfait' is the pluperfect. The 'passe anterieur' is the past anterior. The 'futur anterieur' is the future perfect.
passe une bonne semaine
When speaking in the past tense.
fait - complete verb in link.
It means past tense words in french.
passe compose---- pouve (accent aigu)
I went up, in passe compose.
What is happening in the snow?
it is elle
write notes on the past composed tense
This question does not make sense. Aux is a preposition, not any part of a verb.
Past Participle is "dit"
J'ai été is the passé composé for "je suis".
Imparfait is used for events that happened a long time ago, while passe compose is used for more recent events. It is important to identify how to use passe compose and imparfait correctly to express past events.