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[french] Help With Conjugating These Three Verbs

How would you conjugate the following French verbs?

Je préfère, tu préfères, il préfère, nous préférons, vous préférez, ils préfèrent.

Je désobéis, tu désobéis, il désobéit, nous désobéissons, vous désobéissez, ils désobéissent.

Je rends visite à, tu rends visite à, il rend visite à, nous rendons visite à, vous rendez visite à, ils rendent visite à.

"Rendre visite à" means "to visit someone".

How do you conjugate the french verb être in present?

The conjugation of the verb « être » in the Indicatif présent tense is:

Je suis
tu es
il, elle, on est
nous sommes
vous êtes
ils, elles sont


This is a nice French verb conjugation website:

http://www.les-verbes.com/index.html

How do we conjugate "aller" in French?

Your question is imprecise.You need to say at which tense. There are 22…If you learn french, I recommend you to save this link to the Bescherelle:Conjugueur | BescherelleBescherelle is the basic conjugaison book for most french verbs. Used in all french schools in France and abroad, wherever french is taught.French having a majority of irregular verbs, it is very useful.I still need to look at one of the three we have at home, from time to time.

Can you write me a guide to verb conjugations in French?

Write out the conjugations system for you? I really don't have the time.Go to the following site and put the infinitive (or any other form) in the box; hit return and get a full conjugation table; 12000 verbs are listed.More 12000 french conjugate verbsOr go to Abebooks at Shop for Books, Art & Collectibles and order a used paper copy of the student’s all-time classic guide to the French verb for less than five dollars:La Conjugaison 12000 Verbes (Bescherelle 1)Here's a bird's eye view of the French verbal system:INDICATIVE MOOD (8 tenses, 3 persons, singular and plural = 48 forms)present, simple past, imperfect, future, present perfect, past perfect, pluperfect, past futureSUBJUNCTIVE MOOD (4 tenses, 3 persons, singular and plural = 24 forms)present, past, imperfect, pluperfectCONDITIONAL MOOD (3 tenses, 9 persons, singular and plural = 18 forms)present, first past, second pastIMPERATIVE MOOD (2 tenses, 3 persons = 6 forms)present, pastINFINITIVE (2 tenses = 2 forms)present, pastPARTICIPLE (2 tenses = 2 forms)present, pastTOTAL FORMS = 100 (for most verbs)There are several "defective" verbs that don't have all forms.There is also the near-future which, as in English, is constructed with a conjugated form of "aller" (to go) plus a present infinitive, such as je vais le faire, (I am going to do it) instead of the simple future je le ferai (I shall do it).There is also a relatively modern and not much used tense called the "over-compound" (surcomposée) that is constructed from the past participle of the main verb plus two auxiliary verbs.Bonne chance et surtout bon courage!

Which language has the hardest and most verb conjugations french or spanish?

They have the same conjugations and a similar number of irregular verbs.

However, Spanish has more verb tenses and subjunctive forms and, unlike French, they are all in common use in the everyday language. However, the construction of compound past tenses is probably harder in French as you have to be sure to select the correct auxiliary verb and, in certain cases, make the past participle agree in gender and number with either the object or subject of the verb, depending on the type of verb. This rather troublesome refinement does not exist in Spanish.

Help completing French sentences?

I am not understanding how to make these three sentences grammatically correct for my homework. I have to fill in a blank with the correct conjugated past-tense verb, but even then it isn't correct, and I don't know why. Please help.

J'_______ (prendre, oublier) une glace à la terrasse d'un café.
Ils _____ (fréquenter, faire) une promenade.
Mes parents ______ (dessiner, célébrer) leur anniversaire de mariage.

NEED HELP, FRENCH tense of regular –er verbs?

the verbs finishing in -er are the most easy because their "radical" doesn't change at all. Go on this page, the verb "aimer" is conjugated at all the tenses and every end that must be changed is always put in orange. http://www.leconjugueur.com/php5/index.p...

Why does the English language have verb conjugations? It uses helping words (e.g., “will” and “has”) to establish tense. A language with helping words and no verb conjugations like Chinese works just fine, so why does English need them?

“Why does the English language have verb conjugations for there are helping words (ie. will, was) to establish tense? A language with helping words and no verb conjugations like Chinese works just fine, so why does English need them?”It has long puzzled me that we use so many auxiliary verbs (“helping words”). I suspect it relates to the gentrification of English around the Fourteenth Century when the English “nobility” began to adopt English in place of their Norman French.Courtly language uses a lot of elaborated structure to allow hard things to be said in ways that sound gentle. Auxiliary verbs are also used, at least to some extent, in French and that, too, might have influenced the Normans to transfer that to English.Modern formal English is the bastard child of that process, being primarily the language of the gentry, and it could be interesting research to find to what extent auxiliary verbs are used in surviving regional dialects.

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