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36 questions
Regular -er verb endings in the present tense are:
-s, -s, -t, -ons, -tes, -ent
-is, -is, -it, -issons, -issez, -issent
-e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent
-s, -s, __ , -ons, -ez, -ent
Regular -ir verb endings in the present tense are... (take the -ir off and add...) :
-e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent
-s, -s, -t, -ons, -ez, -ent
-s, -s, ___, -ons, -tes, -ent
-is, -is, -it, -issons, -issez, -issent
The endings for regular -re ending verbs ... (take the -re off and add...)
-s, -s, __ , -ons, -ez, -ent
-is, -is, -it, -issons, -issez, -issent
-s, -s, -t, -ons, -tes, -ent
-e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent
The Irregular verb faire has these endings...
-is, -is, -it, -issons, -issez, -issent
-s, -s, -t, -ons, -ez, -ent
-e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent
-s, -s, -t, -sons, -tes, -ont
Besides "I am..." Je suis can mean ...
I survive
I do / make
I follow
I love
vivre =
to love
to live
to follow
to try
What are the singular forms of "vivre" in the present tense?
je vois, tu vois, il voit
nous voyons, vous voyez, ils voient
je vis, tu vis, il vit
nous vivons, tu vivez, ils vivent.
The "je" and "tu" form of "vouloir" (to wish or to want) have what letter at the end?
-x
-s
-t
-e
The "je" and "tu" forms of "pouvoir" (to be able) have what letter at the end?
-s
-e
-z
-x
Tenir =
to have or hold
to come
to take
to work
venir =
to live
to visit
to come
to fly or to steal
The conjugations of tenir, venir, and prendre all have something in common in their ils/elles form. What is it?
They all end with -tes.
They all have a single "n."
They all have a double "n." (nn)
They all end with -ons.
What is the "vous" form of "être"?
faites
êtes
ont
sont
What do the je, tu, and il/elle form of "aller" look like?
vois, vois, voit
vis, vis, vit
viens, viens, vient
vais, vas, va
What does the "vous" form of "faire" (to do/make) look like?
faites
font
faisez
finissez
On the plural side of "aller," do the nous and vous forms "stay faithful" to the root? (In other words, do the nous and vous forms start with "all.." )
oui (yes)
non (no)
The present-tense forms of the verb "devoir" (to must) are:
dois, dois, doit, devons, devez, doivent
dis, dis, dit, disons, dites, disent
The endings for the present-tense form of the irregular verb "écrire" (to write) are ( take the -re off and add...)
-s, -s, -t, -vons, -vez, -vent
-e, -es, -e, -ons, -tes, -tent
-s, -s, ___, -ons, -ez, -ent
lire =
to live
to love
to write
to read
What is the ils/elles form for the verb "aller" ?
ont
sont
vont
font
What is the ils/elles (3rd person plural) form of "avoir" ?
font
vont
ont
sont
What is the ils/elles form of "être" ?
vont
sont
font
ont
What happens within the "boot" of the verb appeler?
Two "p's" goes down to one "p."
The L's are doubled.
The L is replaced by a v.
the L's remain single.
In -yer ending verbs like "payer" and "essayer," what happens in the "boot?"
the y remains for all "boot" forms but changes to an "i" for nous & vous
the y changes to an i within the boot
What happens in the "boot" for irregular -er verbs with two "accent aigus" like: préférer and répéter ?
the accent aigu changes to a circonflexe (^) on the second "e"
the accent aigu changes to an accent grave on the second "e"
Why are "acheter" (to buy) and "lever" (to raise) considered irregular -er verbs?
the first "e" will get an accent grave within the boot
their vous form ends in an -s instead of a -z
the first "e" will get an accent aigu within the boot
Verbs that end in -ger, like manger and voyager, are like all regular -er verbs except:
there are no exceptions, they are regular -er verbs
they keep the "e" in the nous form to keep the sound of the "g" soft
Besides both indicating that someone is leaving or going out a door, how else are partir and sortir alike?
They are both regular -ir verbs.
They both keep the "t" in the je and tu forms, but not in the other forms
They both replace the "t" in the je and tu forms with an "s" ; they keep the "t" in the other forms
devoir =
to must, to have to...
to say or tell
to give
The nous and vous forms of devoir (to "must"):
dois, doit
disons, dites
devoyons, devoyez
devons, devez
mettre =
to take
to put, place, or set
prendre =
to take
to put, place, or set
prendre and comprendre and not regular -re ending verbs because
they drop the "d" in all plural forms and also double the "n" in the ils/elles form
their plural forms do not end in -ons, -ez, and -ent like regular -re ending verbs
In all plural forms of "mettre" (to put, place, or set):
one 't" is dropped
all t's remain doubled
the "t's" change to "n's" in the ils/elles form
On the single side of "mettre," drop the "re" and...
add "s" to the "je" and "tu" forms, but add nothing to the il/elle form
also drop a "t"; then add "s" to the "je" and "tu" forms, but nothing to the il/elle form
add -e, -es, and -e like you would for regular -er ending verbs
"mets" (the "je" and "tu" form of the verb mettre (to put, place, or set) sounds like:
the month that comes befoe June
a famous NY baseball team
the word "maze"
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