Irregular Verbs in French in the Present Tense
What Is an Irregular Verb?
80% of verbs in French are ER-regular verbs, meaning they follow ONE regular pattern. Unfortunately like in English, these verbs are not the most useful, because Fate made sure you will learn the irregular verbs by making them the most used. Try to avoid using, to be, to have, to go, to come….However don’t go in panic mode. These verbs follow conjugation patterns that are not the same as the regular conjugation patterns in some or all forms of the verb but still there are still several recognizable patterns present. For example, whereas the ils/elles regular ending typically contains ent, the irregular ending will usually contain ont. Also, the vous ending in irregular verbs often contains an ez just like the regular ending, making it more easily recognizable as a vous-form conjugation. But, as they are irregular verbs, keep in mind that not all of them will follow these patterns, which is why they are labeled irregular verbs in the first place.Common Irregular Verbs
Here are five of the most common irregular verbs—être (to be), faire (to do/to make), aller (to go), and avoir (to have)—along with their conjugations in the present tense: Etre
| Avoir
| Aller
| Faire
|
You can see several patterns within the verbs.This helps cut down on the memorization necessary for learning them. However, it is important to learn all of the forms individually because these are very common verbs and ones you will see and use quite often.
Common Irregular Verbs following a je/tu/il/ils pattern VERSUS an Infinitif/nous/vous pattern.
The most common of these is Vouloir. As long as you know the infinitive and the “Je” form, you are ok.
| | Vouloir |
Je | veux | |
tu | veux | |
Il/elle/on | veut | |
nous | | voulons |
| | voulez |
| veulent | |
Exercise:
Do the same with DEVOIR ( je dois) and POUVOIR (Je peux). Easy as long as you know the infinitive ( Devoir) and the je form/ dois;
Expressions with Avoir
Some people got confused about when to use Etre or Avoir.Exactly like in English, Etre is followed by an adjective
Je suis anglais/ I’m English
Avoir is followed by a noun.
J’ai faim I have hunger/ however used the natural translation I’m hungry- avoir faim (to be hungry)
- avoir soif (to be thirsty)
- avoir sommeil (to be tired)
- avoir peur (to be afraid)
- avoir raison (to be right/correct)
- avoir tort (to be wrong/incorrect)
- avoir mal (to be sick/not feel good)
- avoir chaud (to be hot)
- avoir froid (to be cold)
- avoir ___ ans (to be ___ years old)
1 comment:
Actually I'm in Grade 7 and our French teacher taught us the Avoir, Etre, and Aller verbes and some other but i can't remember them now.
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