In French there are three past tenses:
The first: passé composé: j'ai eu.
The second: l'imparfais: j'avais.
The third: le passé simple: j'eus
regardé (goes with avoir, totally regular)
The conjugated form of "avoir" and "fait." Example: Tu as fait ton devoir.
The past tense in French is called "le passé composé". It is formed by using a helper verb (usually "avoir" or "être") followed by the past participle of the main verb.
The past participle of "avoir" is "eu".
été and weirdly enough, it goes with avoir. so, j'ai été, tu as été, etc.
If the sentence contains the conjugated form of "avoir" as well as the past participle. Present tense: Je chante! Past tense: J'ai chanté!
The conjugated form of "avoir" and "fait." Example: Tu as fait ton devoir.
regardé (goes with avoir, totally regular)
The past tense in French is called "le passé composé". It is formed by using a helper verb (usually "avoir" or "être") followed by the past participle of the main verb.
The past participle of "avoir" is "eu".
He helps you learn the french verbs in the past tense that use Etre instead of Avoir
été and weirdly enough, it goes with avoir. so, j'ai été, tu as été, etc.
nagé is the past tense and that goes with the auxiliary verb "Avoir" but to swim as an infinitive is nager
to have = avoir i have = j'ai you have = tu as he has = il a we have = nous avons y'all have = vous avez they have = ils ont --- got is the past tense of have, so add avoir and then "eu" which is the special past tense of avoir j'ai eu tu as eu il a eu nous avons eu vous avez eu ils ont eu
"had" is the past tense of "to have", which is the verb "avoir" in French imparfait tense for avoir: j'avais tu avais il avait nous avions vous aviez ils avaient It is one of the two "auxiliary" verbs in French, it enables you to conjugate verbs in composite tenses like plus que parfait or passé composé. auxiliary verbs: to have: avoir to be: être
The French verb "avoir" means "to have." In the present tense, it is conjugated as follows: J'ai Tu as Il/Elle/On a Nous avons Vous avez Ils/Elles ont The past participle of avoir is eu. In the past perfect tense, avoir is conjugated as follows: J'avais Tu avais Il/Elle/On avait Nous avions Vous aviez Ils/Ellse avaient In the future tense, avoir is conjugated as follows: J'aurai Tu auras Il/Elle/On aura Nous aurons Vous aurez Ils/Elles auront In the conditional tense, avoir is conjugated as follows: J'aurais Tu aurais Il/Elle/On aurait Nous aurions Vous auriez Ils/Elles auraient
Depends. Technically, 'fait' alone is present tense, but if you have the verb "avoir" just before it, the verb structure is past tense. For instance 'il fait la cuisine' = he is cooking, but 'il a fait la cuisine' = he has cooked and 'il avait fait la cuisine' = he had cooked.