Wednesday, November 6, 2019
French Compound Tenses and Moods
French Compound Tenses and Moods Conjugations for the different French verb tenses and moods can be divided into two categories: simple and compound. Simple tenses and moods have only one part (e.g., je vais) whereas compound tenses and moods have two (je suis allà ©). This lesson will explain everything you need to know about the more complicated compound conjugations.But first, a chart: the simple tense or mood on the left is used to conjugate the auxiliary verb for the compound tense or mood on the right, as demonstrated with the verb avoir (to have). Simple Compound Present tu as (you have) Pass compos tu as eu (you have had) Imperfect tu avais (you were having) Pluperfect tu avais eu (you had had) Pass simple tu eus (you had) Past anterior tu eus eu (you had had) Future tu auras (you will have) Future perfect tu auras eu (you will have had) Conditional tu aurais (you would have) Conditional perfect tu aurais eu (you would have had) Subjunctive tu aies (you have) Past subjunctive tu aies eu (you had) Imperfect subjunctive tu eusses (you were having) Pluperfect subjunctive tu eusses eu (you had had) Imperative (tu) aie ([you] have) Past imperative (tu) aie eu ([you] have had) Present participle ayant (having) Perfect participle ayant eu (having had) Infinitive avoir (to have) Past infinitive avoir eu (to have had) Please note that I have provided (English translations) to give you an idea about the differences in meaning, but there may be other possibilities. For detailed information about each tense and mood, click the links to read the lesson. You might also find this lesson helpful:à Translating French verbs into English. See otherà French verbsà conjugated into all the tenses and moods: Simple Compound aller aller avoir avoir tre tre prendre prendre There are four things you need to know about French compound tenses and moods in order to conjugate and use them correctly. 1. Two-part conjugations Compound tenses/moods are always made up of two parts: the conjugatedà auxiliary verbà (eitherà avoirà orà à ªtre) and theà past participle. French verbs are classified by their auxiliary verb, and use it for all compound moods/tenses. That is,à avoirà verbs useà avoirà in all of the compound tenses/moods, andà à ªtreà verbs useà à ªtreà in all the compound tenses/moods.In the chart on page 1, the tense/mood in the first column is the conjugation used for the auxiliary verb of the compound tense/mood listed in the second column.For example,à allerà is anà à ªtreà verb. So the present tense ofà à ªtre,à Il est, is the conjugation used for the passà © composà © ofà aller:à Il est allà ©Ã (He went).Mangerà is anà avoirà verb. The future ofà avoir,à Nous aurons, is the conjugation for the future perfect,à Nous aurons mangà ©Ã (We will have eaten).à 2. Agreement There are two different types of agreement with compound tenses and moods, depending on whether youre dealing withà à ªtreà verbs orà avoirà verbs.ÃÅ tre verbs:à In all compound tenses/moods, the past participle ofà à ªtreà verbsà has to agree with the subject of the sentence in gender and number.à à à Il est allà ©.à à à He went.à à à Elle à ©tait allà ©e.à à à She had gone. à à à Ils seront allà ©s.à à à They will have gone.à à à ...quelles soient allà ©es.à à à ...that they went.Avoir verbs:à The past participle ofà avoirà verbs that areà preceded by aà direct objectà must agree with the direct object*à à à Les livres que tu as commandà ©s sont ici.à à à The books that you ordered are here.à à à La pomme ? Je laurai mangà ©e.à à à The apple? I will have eaten it. à à à Mes sÃ
âurs... vous les aviez vues ?à à à My sisters... had you seen them?*Except forà ve rbs of perceptionà and theà causative.When theà direct object followsà theà avoirà verb, there is no agreement.à à à As-tu commandà © des livresà ?à à à Did you order some books?à à à Jaurai mangà © la pomme.à à à I will have eaten the apple. à à à Aviez-vous vu mes sÃ
âurs ?à à à Had you seen my sisters?There isà no agreement withà indirect objects.à à à Je leur ai parlà ©.à à à I talked to them.à à à Il nous a tà ©là ©phonà ©.à à à He called us.Learn more about agreementà 3. Word order: Pronouns Object, reflexive, and adverbial pronounsà always precede the auxiliary verb in compound tenses/moods: à à à Je te lai donnà ©.à à à I gave it to you.à à à Il lavait fait.à à à He had done it. à à à Nous y serons allà ©s.à à à We will have gone there.à 4. Word order: Negation Negative structuresà almost always surround the auxiliary verb** à à à Je nai pas à ©tudià ©.à à à I didnt study.à à à Nous naurions jamais su.à à à We would have never known.**Exceptions:à à à a)à In theà past infinitive, both parts of the negation precede the auxiliary verb:à à à à à à à Jespà ¨re ne pas avoir perdu.à à à à à à I hope I didnt lose.à à à b)à Personne,à aucun, andà nulle partà follow the past participle:à à à à à à Je nai vu personne.à à à à à à I didnt see anyone.à à à à à à Je ne lai trouvà © nulle part.à à à à à à I couldnt find it anywhere.à 34. Word order with pronouns and negation When the sentence includes a pronoun and negation, the pronoun is placed in front of the auxiliary verb, and then the negative structure surrounds that pair:Subject à neà pronoun(s) auxiliary verb negative word past participle.à à à Nous ny serions jamais allà ©s.à à à We would never have gone there.à à à Je ne te lai pas donnà ©.à à à I didnt give it to you.For detailed information about the conjugations and uses of the individual compound tenses/moods, follow the links in the summary table on page 1. Other two-verb constructions In addition to compound conjugations (auxiliary verb past participle), French has other two-verb forms, what I call dual-verb constructions. These consist of a semi-auxiliary verb plus an infinitive, and the rules regarding agreement and word order are somewhat different -à learn more. For more information about how all the different French tenses and moods fit together, take a look at ourà French verb timeline.
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