Read below each evening and then try and find your own examples to understand how to conjugate 'er' verbs at these four tenses. You don't need to spend more than 20 minutes tonight, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday night. We will have a little quiz in class on Friday. Use www.conjugaison.com to help. Ask me some questions about it if you don't understand. We will be working on it some more in class this week. Look at the endings, they repeat themselves from one 'er' verb to another. M.K.
"Enquête dans les Conjugaisons françaises!"
This Friday: You will have a quiz on the following information. We worked on this last week and today. We will continue to work on it in class. At home, please re-read this each night, and try and quiz yourself with similar questions as the examples provided. To keep it simple for now, we will only use the verbs ending in 'er'.In our inquiry, Aimon found the following patterns:
At the present tense, er verbs have the following endings:
je = ...e tu = ... es il/elle = ...e nous = ...ons vous = ...ez ils/elles = ...ent
Passé composé: j'ai ...é tu as ...é il/elle a ...é nous avons ...é vous avez ...é
ils/elles ont ...é
Imparfait: je = ...ais tu = ...ais il/elle = ...ait nous = ...ions vous = ...iez
ils/elles = ...aient
futur simple: je = ...erai tu = ...eras il/elle = ...era nous = ...erons
vous = ...erez ils/elles = ...eront
Important examples: (using marcher et parler)
présent: je marche je parle
passé composé: tu as marché tu as parlé
imparfait: nous marchions nous parlions
futur: vous marcherez vous parlerez
No comments:
Post a Comment