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<verb>
represents some generic verb in its infinitive form.conj(<verb>)
means the verb is conjugated.Common examples:
Syntax:
<pers. pronoun> <refl. pronoun> conj(<verb>)
<pers. pronoun> <refl. pronoun> conj(etre) <verb>
<verb>
agrees with gender and number: elle s’est perdue, ils se sont perdusSyntax:
If <indicative imperfect>, then <present conditional>
<present conditional> if <indicative imperfect>
We use <conj. etre> <verb>
when <verb>
denotes displacement and <verb>
is used as indirect verb. For all other verbs we use <conj. avoir>
.
<conj. etre>
, <verb>
agrees with person and number.je | tu | il/elle/on | nous | vous | ils/elles |
je | tu | il/elle/on | nous | vous | ils/elles |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
me | te | se | nous | vous | se |
Terms that are very similar and which can be confusing when to use.
Rule of thumb: ce qui should be used when it precedes a verb (including reflexive forms), else ce que.