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French conjugation in one video

Posted: Thu Feb 13, 2025 5:13 am
by jrineakter
Hi! Conjugation is very important in French. If you have problems with conjugation, you can be misunderstood or you can say things that are different from what you wanted to say. We will try to help you with that today.

Before we go any further, let me tell you that you can take a quiz related to this video . You have a link at the bottom, it's the first link that allows you to test yourself, to test your understanding of today's video. You can already open it in a new tab and test yourself at the end of this video.

So, today's goal is relatively ambitious. We want to take you on a tour of French conjugation. We're going to talk about the most used tenses and moods and we want to do it in a relatively short time.

The idea is not really to explain all the denmark whatsapp number data theory, all the endings, but to provide you with the context in which we use these main tenses and we will offer you some examples. We will exclude some tenses that are not used much and that would not be useful here. We will try to make it as short as possible, so it will not be exhaustive.

However, by the end of this video, you will have a very good overview of what French conjugation is, how it works, and how you can apply it in most situations in life.

The goal is not to make a list of all the moods, all the tenses, all the endings and all the verbs, of course. If you have any doubts, there are plenty of online resources that will give you all the conjugations in all the tenses of all the verbs. So we're going to put that aside. We don't want to be completely useless and uninteresting in this video. On the other hand, we're going to cover the major tenses with examples. Let's go.

We start with the simplest: the present indicative. It is used to say that an action is taking place. For example: "I am recording a video". I am doing it now, it is in progress. It is also used to talk about a fact or a generality. Paris is the capital of France for example. It is always true, it is a fact, it is a generality. And often, orally, it is used to talk about the future. For example: "I am eating with my parents, this weekend". So there, it is in the present, but the "this weekend" indicates that it will happen later, in the future.

The second tense that is very commonly used in speaking is the imperative. It is used to express an order. For example: put your things away. I give someone an order. It is also used to give advice, "taste my dish" for example, or to defend something, for example "don't park your car here".