French Grammar and Book of VerbsE. Talbot-Tournier, 1904 - 230 pages |
Expressions et termes fréquents
adjectives adverbs agree answer article is used belongs book bouillir broken glass compound tenses Conditional Conjugate Conjugate after CONJUGATION conjunctive consonant couse dative dear wife definite article denoting dorme écr English envoyer équateur essaie eusses expressed father feminine final fini finish first followed following follows French gender genders general generally give good Imperative Imperfect Subjunctive Indicative Infinitive inine Irregular Verbs levé little little boys loved masculine means MOOD mute nearly necessary neig non-aspirated Nouns ending number one's oneself open parlé partitive Past Participle pèle Perf personal pronouns Pluperfect plural preceded preceding preposition Pres Present Participle Preterit pronounced pronunciation pudding rédui risen rule same manner Second Future sent serve silent SIMPLE TENSES singular sleep snow snowed sound speak spoken subject Subjunctive Present syllable take tenses are conjugated things third person thou thus usually vainque vendez vendu vête vowel wish woman words written
Fréquemment cités
Page 113 - Note VI. — When nominatives to the same verb are of different persons, the verb must be in the plural number, and must agree with the first person rather than the second, and with the second rather than the third : " My sister and I are daily employed in our respective occupations.
Page 64 - Fem. le mien la mienne les miens les miennes mine le tien la tienne les tiens les tiennes thine le sien la sienne les siens les siennes his, hers...
Page 185 - Que je croie, que tu croies, qu'il croie, que nous croyions, que vous croyiez, qu'ils croient.. — Que je crusse.
Page 163 - Subjonctif présent : que je veuille, que tu veuilles, qu'il veuille ; que nous voulions, que vous vouliez, qu'ils veuillent.
Page 131 - Je m'assieds, tu t'assieds, il s'assied, nous nous asseyons, vous vous asseyez, ils s'asseyent.
Page 131 - Je m'en vais, tu t'en vas, il s'en va, nous nous en allons, vous vous en allez, ils s'en vont.
Page 114 - Now sbideth faith, hope, charity ; these three. — 1 Cor. xiii. 13. OBS. 3. — When the nominatives are of different persons, the verb agrees with the first person in preference to the second, and with the second in preference to the third...
Page 92 - There are five principal parts in the conjugation of French verbs, namely, the Present Infinitive, the Present Participle, the Past Participle, the Present Indicative, and the Preterit Indicative. They are called principal or primitive parts, because when they are known, all others can be inferred from them.
Page 52 - ... greater; le plus grand, the greatest. petit, small; plus petit, smaller; le plus petit, the smallest The following adjectives are compared irregularly : bon, good; meilleur, better; le meilleur, the best. mauvais, bad; pire, worse; le pire, the worst.
Page 88 - J'aurai eu. Tu auras eu. Il aura eu. Nous aurons eu. Vous aurez eu. Ils auront eu.