The conjugated form of "avoir" and "fait."
Example:
Tu as fait ton devoir.
The past participle of "faire" in French is "fait".
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.
The past tense of the French word "est" is "était."
The past tense of the French verb "jouer" is "joué."
regardé (goes with avoir, totally regular)
The past participle of "faire" in French is "fait".
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.
The past tense of the French word "est" is "était."
The past tense of the French verb "jouer" is "joué."
''Était''
A different French word... :D You change the ending of a verb in the past tense.
regardé (goes with avoir, totally regular)
save is "sauver" Ex: Tu as sauvé ma vie. (You saved my life.)
Past tense of "like" such as "I liked" in French is "J'ai aime" with an accent on the last "e" in the phrase. If you mean to say that you liked something for many years but you don't anymore, you could use "J'aimais."
The passé composé of "faire" is "j'ai fait" for the first person singular (I have done). It is formed with the auxiliary verb "avoir" in the present tense followed by the past participle of "faire."
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.
If the sentence contains the conjugated form of "avoir" as well as the past participle. Present tense: Je chante! Past tense: J'ai chanté!