Gender of French Nouns

Masculine Nouns

Ending in a consonant, especially -c, -d, -g, -l, -r, -t
-age, -âge, -asme, -cle, -cre, -ède, -ège, -ème, -isme
-gramme, -graphe, -logue, -mètre, -pode, -scaphe, -scope
-é expect -té, -tié
-i, -o
-ai, -eau, -eu, -oi, -ou

Letter of alphabet
Days of week, months and seasons
Colors
Languages
Metric weights, measures and cardinal points
Directions
Countries and states not ending in e
Metals
Trees
Cardinal numbers
Compound nouns
Noun derived from English

Un auteur
Un écrivain
Un médecin
Un peintre
Un témoin
Un professeur

Feminine Nouns

Ending in e, -ée
-té, -tié
-aison, -eur, -ion, -ison, -sion, -tion
(-n, -r, -s, -t, -x)

Virtues
Countries ending with a mute e
Automobiles
Rivers ending in e

Une victime
Une personne

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French Tenses of the Indicative Mood Memo

Les temps de l’indicatif / Die Zeiten des Indikativ

4 temps simples / 4 simple tenses / 4 einfache Zeiten

le présent/the present/das Präsens

Things, a habitual action, a description and a truth at the present time, in a near future or in from the past to the present. A vividly description about past event.
(S do, S be doing, S do do / es macht, es kommt)

je suis, tu es, il/elle est, nous sommes, vous êtes, ils/elles sont

j’ai, tu as, il/elle a, nous avons, vous avez, ils/elles ont

je chante, tu chantes, il chante, nous chantons, vous chantez, ils/elles chantent

je pars, tu pars, il/elle part, nous partons, vous partez, ils partons, vous partez, ils partent

l’imparfait / the imperfect / das Imperfekt

Continuous things, habitual action, description and truth in the past.
One of the verb tenses used to talk about the past, especially in descriptions, and to say what used to happen.
(S was doing, S used to do, S did / es machte, es kam)

j’étais, tu étais, il/elle était, nous étions, vous étiez, ils/elles étaient

j’avais, tu avais, il/elle avait, nous avions, vous aviez, ils avaient

je chantais, tu chantais, il/elle chantait, nous chantions, vous chantiez, ils/elles chantaient

je partais, tu partais, il/elle partait, nous partait, vous partiez, ils/elles partaient

le passé simple / simple past / das Passé simple

A literary past tense.
(S did / es machte, es kam)

je fus, tu fus, il/elle fut, nous fûmes, vous fûtes, ils/elles furent

j’eus, tu eus, il/elles eut, nous eûtes, vous eûtes, ils/elles eurent

je chantai, tu chantas, il/elle chanta, nous chantâmes, vous chantâtes, ils/elles chantèrent

je partis, tu partis, il/elle partit, nous partîmes, vous partîtes, ils/elles partirent

le futur simple / the future simple / das Futur Ⅰ

Something that will happen or will be true.
(S will do, S shall do / es werd machen, es wird kommen)

je serai, tu seras, il/elle sera, nous serons, vous serez, ils/elles seront

j’aurai, tu auras, il/elle aura, nous aurons, vous aurez, ils/elles auront

je chanterai, tu chanteras, il/elle chantera, nous chanterons, vous chanterez, ils/elles chanteront

je partirai, tu partiras, il/elle partira, nous partirons, vous partirez, ils/elles partiront

4 temps composés / 4 compound tenses / 4 Zusammengesetzte Zeiten

le passé composé, the compound past, das Perfekt

Things have happened or were true in the past, and were completed at a point in the past.
auxiliaire (présent) + participle passé
(S did, S have done, S did done / es hat gemacht, es ist gekommen)

j’ai été, tu as été, il/elle a été, nous avons été, vous avez été, ils/elles ont été

j’ai eu, tu as eu, il/elle a eu, nous avons eu, vous avez eu, ils/elle ont eu

j’ai chanté, tu as chanté, il/elle a chanté, vous avez chanté, ils/elles ont chanté

je suis parti(e), tu es parti(e), il/elle est parti(e), nous sommes parti(e)s, vous êtes parti(e)(s), ils/elles ont parti(e)s

le plus-que-parfait / the pluperfect / das Plusquamperfekt

Thing had happened before another action at a point in the past.
auxiliaire (imparfait) + participle passé
(S had done, S had been doing / es hatte gemacht, es war gekommen)

j’avais été, tu avais été, il/elle avait été, nous avions été, vous aviez été, ils/elles avaient été

j’avais eu, tu avais eu, il/elle avait eu, nous avions eu, vous aviez eu, ils/elles avaient eu

j’avais chanté, tu avais chanté, il/elle avait chanté, nous avions chanté, vous aviez chanté, ils/elles avaient chanté

j’étais parti(e), tu étais parti(e), il/elle était parti(e), nous étions parti(e)s, vous étiez parti(e)(s), ils/elles étaient parti(e)s

le passé antérieur / the past perfect / das Passé Antérieur

Literary equivalent to the pluperfect.
auxiliaire (passé simple) + participle passé
(S had done / es hatte gemacht, es war gekommen)

j’eus été, tu eus été, ils/elle eut été, nous eûmes été, vous eûtes été, ils/elles eurent été

j’eus eu, tu eus eu, ils/elles eut eu, nous eûmes eu, vous eûtes eu, ils/elles eurent eu

j’eus chanté, tu eus chanté, il/elle eut chanté, nous eûmes chanté, vous eûtes chanté, ils/elles eurent chanté

je fus parti(e), tu fus parti(e), il/elle fut parti(e), nous fûmes parti(e)s, vous fûtes parti(e)(s), ils/elles furent parti(e)s

le futur antérieur / the future perfect / das Futur Ⅱ

Things will happen in the future before another future action. Action will be completed at the specific time in the future.
auxiliaire (futur) + participle passé
(S will have done, S shall have done / es wird gemacht haben, es wird gekommen sein)

j’aurai aurai été, tu auras été, il/elle aura été, nous aurons été, vous aurez été, ils/elles auront été

j’aurai eu, tu auras eu, il/elle aura eu, nous aurons eu, vous aurez eu, ils/elles auront eu

j’aurai chanté, tu auras chanté, il/elle aura chanté, nous aurons chanté, vous aurez chanté, ils/elles auront chanté

je serai parti(e), tu seras parti(e), il/elle sera parti(e), nous serons parti(e)s, vous serez parti(e)(s), ils/elles seront parti(e)s

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French Grammar Memo part 4 (verbs, moods, tenses, negatives, questions)

VERBS

Verbs groups

GROUP 1: infinitife ending in -er.
GROUP 2: infinitife ending in -ir, with present participle in -issant.
GROUP 3: infinitife ending in -ir, with present participle in -ant, and infinitive ending in -re.

Six moods

INDICATIVE is the mood of verbs used to ‘indicate’ facts, actions, events, etc.
SUBJUNCTIVE is the mood of verbs having an ‘underlying’ (sub) ‘connection’ (junctive) with something previously stated, particularly a feeling or an emotion.
CONDITIONAL is the mood of verbs tied to a condition.
IMPERATIVE is the mood of verbs expressing commands, wishes, and the like.
PARTICIPLE is the mood of verbs that take part in two natures, at times verbs, at times adjectives.
INFINITIVE is the mood of verbs whose form has a fixed, incariable ending.

Eight tenses of the indicative mood

(4 SIMPLE TENSES one word – 4 COMPOUND TENSES auxiliary + past participle)
présent (present) – passé composé (compound past)
imparfait (imperfect) – plus-que-parfait (past perfect)
futur (future) – futur antérieur (future perfect)
passé simple (simple past) – passé antérieur (past perfect)

Means of 4 simple tense of the indicative mood

THE PRESENT TENSE is used to talk about what is true at the moment, what happens regularly and what happens now.
THE IMPERFECT TENSE is one of the verb tenses used to talk about the past, especially in descriptions, and to say what used to happen.
THE FUTURE TENSE is a verb tense used to talk about something that will happen or will be true.
THE SIMPLE PAST TENSE is used only in literary or formal style equivalent of the passé composé.

The perfect tense (Passé composé or past indefinite tense)

THE PERFECT is one of the verb tenses used in French talk about the past, especially about actions that took place and were completed in the past.
THE PERFECT TENSE is the tense you will need most to talk about things that have happened or were true in the past. It is used to talk about actions that took place and completed in the past.
The tense has two parts to it. The present tense of the verb avoir or être. + A part of the main verb called THE PAST PARTICIPLE.
Below is the verbs which form their perfect tense with être instead of avoir.
(a group of verbs that are mainly used to talk about movement or a change of some kind, including these ones.)
aller – to go
venir – to come
arriver – to arrive, to happen
partir – to leave, to go
descendre – to go down, to come down, to get off
monter – to go up, to come up
entrer – to go in, to come in
sortir – to go out, to come out
mourir – to die
naître – to be born
devenir – to become
rester – to stay
tomber – to fall

The subjunctive mood

The subjunctive is a verb form that is used in certain circumstances to express some sort of feeling, or to show there is doubt about whether something will happen or whether something is true.
In French the subjunctive is used after certain verbs and conjunctions when two parts of a sentence have different subject.
PRERENT SUBJUNCTIVE TENSE
Present subjunctive tense is to express actions or ideas which are subjective or otherwise uncertain: will/wanting, emotion, doubt, possibility, necessity, judgement.
PAST SUBJUNCTIVE TENSE
(subjunctive of avoir or être + past participle)
Past subjunctive tense is used when the verb in the subordinate clause – the verb that follows que – happened before the verb in the main clause.
IMPERFECT SUBJUNCTIVE TENSE
The imperfect subjunctive is literary verb. Used in a subordinate clause when the main clause is in the past. Its non-literary equivalent is the present subjective.
PLUPERFECT SUBJUNCTIVE TENSE
(imperfect subjunctive of avoir or être + past participle)
Pluperfect subjunctive tense is a literary equivalent of the past subjective. It has an identical twin, the second form of the conditional perfect, which is used in literary si clauses.

The conditional mood

The conditional is a verb form used to talk about the things that would happen pr that would be true under certain conditions. (would) It is also used to say what you would like or need. (could, should)
This mood mentions the conditions below.
Asking for something formally and politely, especially in shops.
Saying what you would like.
Making a suggestion.
Giving advice.
PRESENT CONDITIONAL TENSE
(stem of future tense + endings of imperfect tense)
Present conditional tense is to talk about things that would happen or that would be true under conditions. (would)
It to say what you would like or need. (could, should)
PAST CONDITIONAL TENSE
(conditional of avoir or être + past participle)
Past conditional tense is to express action that would have occurred if in the past circumstances had been different.
The result clause in si clause with the unmet condition in the past perfect.
Be used in a sentence where the unmet condition only implied. Express an unrealized desire in the past.

The imperative mood

An IMPERATIVE is a form of the verb used when giving orders and instructions.
(PRONOUN – GROUP 1 VERBS / GROUP 2 VERBS / GROUP 3 VERBS)
tu – donne / finis / attends
nous – donnons / finissons / attendons
vous – donnez / finissez / attendez

Imperative forms of irregular verbs

(PRONOUN – avoir / être / savoir / vouloir)
tu – aie / sois / sache / veuille
nous – ayons / soyons / sachons / veuillons
vous – ayez / soyez / sachez / veuillez

The participle mood

THE PRESENT PARTICIPLE is a verb form engine in -ing used in English to form verb tense, and which may be used as an adjective or a noun.
To form the present participle of regular -er, -ir and -re verbs, you use the nous form of the present sense and replace the -ons ending with -ant.
donnons – donnant
finissons – finissant
descendons – descendant
Three verbs below have an irregular present participle.
avoir – ayant
être – étant
savoir – sachant
THE PAST PARTICIPLE
(INFINITIVE – TAKE OFF A SUFFIX + ADD A SUFFIX = PAST PARTICIPLE)
donner – donn- + -é = donné
finir – fin- + -i = fini
attendre – attend- + -u = attendu

The infinitive mood

The mood of verbs used to ‘indicate’ facts, actions, events, etc.

Reflexive verbs

s’amuser – to play, to enjoy oneself
s’appeler – be called
s’arrêter – to stop
s’asseoir – to sit down
se baigner – to go swimming
se coucher – to go to bed
se dépêcher – hurry
s’habiller – to get dressed
s’intéresser à – to be interested in
se laver – to wash, to have, to wish
se lever – to get up, to rise, to stand up
se passer – to take place, to happen, to go
se promener – to go for a walk
se rappeler – to remember
se réveiller – to wake up
se trouver – to be (situated)
(SUBJECT PRONOUN – REFLEXIVE PRONOUN = MEANING)
je – me (m’) = myself
tu – te (t’) = yourself
ill, elle, on – se (s’) = himself, herself, itself, oneself
nous – nous = ourselves
vous – vous = yourself, yourselves
ils, elles – se (s’) = themselves

Passive voice

The passive in English is usually similarly in French with the auxiliary verb être plus the past particle. This construction occurs most frequently in the compound past (use compound past of être + past participle) and future (use future of être + past participle).
There is a very important difference between French and English in sentences containing an indirect object. In English we can quite easily turn a normal (active) sentence with an indirect object into a passive sentence.
IMPERFECT: j’étais aimé(e) – I was loved
FUTURE: tu seras aimé(e) – you will be loved
PERFECT: il a été aimé – he was loved
The passive voice are not as common in French. There are two ways that express the same idea.
1. By using the pronoun on (someone or they) with a normal active verb.
2. By using a reflexive verb.

NEGATIVES

Negative word order

To make a sentence negative, place ne before the verb and pas after it.
ne… pas – not
ne… rien – nothing, not… anything
ne… personne – nobody, no one, not… anybody, not… anyone
ne… jamais – never, not… ever
ne… plus – no longer, no more, not… any longer, not… any more
non plus – neither

QUESTIONS

4 ways of asking questions

1. By making your voice go up at the end of the sentence.
2. By using the phrase est-ce-que.
3. By changing round the order of words in a sentence. (Inversion)
4. By using question word.

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