Home » Technology » French Tenses: Conjugation Quick Cheat Cheat Sheet by miss_shayshay – Download free from Cheatography

French Tenses: Conjugation Quick Cheat Cheat Sheet by miss_shayshay – Download free from Cheatography

Present

-is

-ir (type 1)

-ir (type 2)

-re

D/I + e

D/I + is

D/I + e/s

D/I + s

Tu + es

tu + is

tu + is/s

tu + s

il + e

il + it

il +e/t

il + d

us + ons

us + tissons

us + ons

us + ons

you +no

you + enough

you + no

you + no

ils + ent

ils + weave

ils + ent

ils + ent

in the process of

in the process of: in the process of doing. (present)
// I’m cooking dinner

near future

Le futur proche, also known as le futur composé, is used to talk about actions in the near future. It corres­­ponds to the English structure going to + infini­­tive, and emphasises that there is already an intention behind the action.

To conjugate the futur proche, we use the present tense of the verb aller as an auxiliary verb, followed by the infinitive of the main verb.

I go, you go, he goes, we go, you go, they go + infinitive

Futur tense

The future stem for -er and -ir verbs is the infini­­tive. For regular -re verbs, the stem is the infinitive minus the final e. In all cases, the future stem ends in -r: this sound charac­­te­rizes the future and the condit­­io­n­a­l.The French simple future tense is generally translated into English with the modal auxiliary ‘will.’

We use the futur simple in the following cases:
to talk about future intentions
to make suppos­­itions or predic­­tions about the future
in condit­­ional sentences (if sentences)

infinitive + The endings for the simple future are: -ai, -as, -a, -ons, -ez, -ont

irregular stems:
to be — ser- (it will be)
to have — aur- (I will have)
go — ir- (we will go)
do — fer- (you will do)
want — want- (they will want)
can — can- (you can)
duty — shall- (she shall)
to have — faudr- (it will have to)

Condit­ional

It’s considered a mood NOT a tense, which describes how an action takes place (rather than when).
Le condit­­ionnel is often translated with would or could in English.
In French, we use the condit­­ional in the following cases:
to express a wish, a possib­­ility, or a hypothesis in the present or the future (condi­­ti­onnel présent) or in the past (condi­­ti­onnel passé)
as a tense to talk about the future from a past point of view
in if-clauses (see the section on condit­­ional clauses
to make polite requests

The stem used to form the condit­­ional is the same as the stem of the future (usually the infini­­tive).
We form the condit­­ionnel présent by adding the imparfait endings to the stem of the futur simple form of the verb.

The condit­­ional endings are -ais, -ais, -ait, -ions, -iez, -aient (These are also the imperfect endings).

Irregu­lars:
Go: ir-
Have: aur–
Duty: duty-
To be: ser-
Make: iron-
Falloir: faudr-
To rain: to rain-
Power: to-
Know: know-
Hold: hold-
Come: come-
See: verr-
Want: want-

Passive Compose

The passé composé is used to describe actions that occurred in the past. They may be single events or series.

Have+
For regular er/ir/­­re­-­v­erbs, the past participle is formed as follows:
If the infinitive ends in -er, the participle ends in It is

If the infinitive ends in -ir, the participle ends in i

If the infinitive ends in -re, the participle ends in u

Etre+ (agree in number and gender)
Used with reflexive verbs + verbs of movement:
be born/die, go/come, rise/fall, arrive/leave, enter/exit, appear, stay, return, fall and their related forms such as: come back, return, rise, come down, start again

Irregular past partic­iple:
Go: gone
Have had
Be summer
Power: could
Only ALLER is plural­­/a­g­r­eement

l’impa­rfait

L’impa­­rfait (the imperfect) is a French past tense. It describes states and actions that were ongoing or repeated in the past. Used to tell stories and report on past actions.

Take the present tense nous form of the verb (remove ons) + the imperfait endings:
-ais, -ais, -ait, -ions, -iez and -aient

Irregular: BE: I was, you were, he was, we were, you were, they were

more than perfect

indicates that an action had taken place and had been completed before another past action took place. The plus‐q­­ue­‐­p­arfait is the compound form of the imperfect and is formed by using the imperfect of the approp­­riate helping verb ( avoir or être) + the past participle of the verb. Its English equivalent is “had” + past partic­­iple.

For verbs conjugated avoir (to have) in the past tense, it’s formed by combining avoir in the imperfect with the past participle. For verbs formed with be in the past tense, use the imperfect of be.

to have

I had
you had
he had
We had
you had
they had

be

I was
you were
it was
we were
you were
they were

+ past participle

Subjun­ctive

L’impe­ratif

the participle

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