The plus-que-parfait is made up af two parts:
the auxiliary (avoir) in the imparfait form + the past participle.
ex: 1st group - "aimer" > j'avais aimé, vous aviez aimé.
2nd group - "finir" > elle avait fini, nous avions fini.
3rd group "croire, prendre" > tu avais cru, elles avaient cru; il avait pris, nous avions pris.
In that pattern you use the "imparfait" endings for "avoir" and the relevant participle for each verb.
A French regular verb is a verb that follows a common conjugation pattern. Regular verbs typically end in -er, -ir, or -re and conjugate predictably according to their verb group. Examples of regular verbs in French include "aimer" (to love), "finir" (to finish), and "vendre" (to sell).
The verb avoir means to be. Je suis: I am Tu es: You are (singular) Il est: He is Elle est: She is Nous avons: We are Vous êtes: You are (Plural, formal) On est: One is Ils sont: They are (masculine) Elles sont: They are (feminine)
To conjugate a verb means to take it through all of the voices, tenses, persons, and moods. A verb is considered regular if that conjugation is made predictably from the verb root. For example, the verb 'parler', which means 'to speak', is a regular verb. For the entire conjugation develops from the root 'parl-'. But the verb 'avoir' is an irregular verb, because its conjugation doesn't develop completely, consistently, entirely, predictably, totally, uniformly from its root.
je - ais (je faisais)tu - ais (tu disais)il, elle - ait (elle aimait)nous - ions (nous finissions)vous - iez (vous trouviez)ils, elles - aient (ils avaient)
To conjugate regular -er verbs in French, remove the -er ending from the infinitive form of the verb (e.g., parler, manger, jouer). Then add the appropriate endings based on the subject pronoun (je, tu, il/elle, nous, vous, ils/elles). For example, for the verb "parler": Je parle Tu parles Il/elle parle Nous parlons Vous parlez Ils/elles parlent
Acheter is a first group verb: it has the same endings as "aimer" (the model verb for the first group). Complete conjugation is in link below.
based on the first group verb 'aimer'j'aimaistu aimaisil, elle aimaitnous aimionsvous aimiezils, elles aimaient
A French regular verb is a verb that follows a common conjugation pattern. Regular verbs typically end in -er, -ir, or -re and conjugate predictably according to their verb group. Examples of regular verbs in French include "aimer" (to love), "finir" (to finish), and "vendre" (to sell).
The verb avoir means to be. Je suis: I am Tu es: You are (singular) Il est: He is Elle est: She is Nous avons: We are Vous êtes: You are (Plural, formal) On est: One is Ils sont: They are (masculine) Elles sont: They are (feminine)
To conjugate a verb means to take it through all of the voices, tenses, persons, and moods. A verb is considered regular if that conjugation is made predictably from the verb root. For example, the verb 'parler', which means 'to speak', is a regular verb. For the entire conjugation develops from the root 'parl-'. But the verb 'avoir' is an irregular verb, because its conjugation doesn't develop completely, consistently, entirely, predictably, totally, uniformly from its root.
je - ais (je faisais)tu - ais (tu disais)il, elle - ait (elle aimait)nous - ions (nous finissions)vous - iez (vous trouviez)ils, elles - aient (ils avaient)
To conjugate regular -er verbs in French, remove the -er ending from the infinitive form of the verb (e.g., parler, manger, jouer). Then add the appropriate endings based on the subject pronoun (je, tu, il/elle, nous, vous, ils/elles). For example, for the verb "parler": Je parle Tu parles Il/elle parle Nous parlons Vous parlez Ils/elles parlent
The verb to play is jouer. This is a regular verb so follows the normal 'er' endings: Je joue Tu joues Elle/Il/On joue Nous jouons Vous jouez Elles/Ils jouent So for 'you' play, this can be said both in singular form and plural. For one person it is, Tu joues And for saying it to several people, Vous jouez
Yes, they do.
Camping = camper (in french) Camping = el acampar (in spanish) Camping = Kampieren (in german) I am taking these three languages at school hope this is helpful to you !!
The verb in French for "to learn" is "Apprendre"
My sister is a RunnER The TimER is going off i dont get it B*tch