French Verb Conjugation

Definition:

French verb conjugation is the systematic morphological inflection of French verbs to encode person (1st, 2nd, 3rd), number (singular, plural), tense (present, passé composé, imparfait, futur, conditionnel), and mood (indicative, subjunctive, imperative, conditional). French has three regular conjugation classes (-er, -ir, -re) plus a substantial number of high-frequency irregular verbs (être, avoir, aller, faire, pouvoir, vouloir, savoir, venir, etc.). A distinguishing feature of French verbal morphology is the large spoken/written gap: in the -er class, four of the six present-tense written forms are phonologically identical (the je/tu/il/ils forms all end in the sound /parle/ — only nous/vous are audibly distinct). This means that French grammar learners must master both a rich written paradigm and the phonologically reduced spoken forms.


The Three Conjugation Classes

ClassInfinitive endingExample
First (most productive)-erparler (to speak)
Second-ir (with -iss- infix in nous/vous)finir (to finish)
Third (irregular mix)-re, -ir without infix, othersvendre (to sell), partir (to leave)

Present Tense Paradigm — Regular

Person-er (parler)-ir (finir)-re (vendre)
jeparlefinisvends
tuparlesfinisvends
il/elleparlefinitvend
nousparlonsfinissonsvendons
vousparlezfinissezvendez
ils/ellesparlentfinissentvendent

Written vs. Spoken Merger

In the -er paradigm, parle / parles / parlent are all pronounced /pa?l/ — the final consonant and -e endings are silent in standard French. Only parlons /pa?l?~/ and parlez /pa?le/ are phonologically distinct.

Key Irregular Verbs (High-Priority)

Verbjetuilnousvousils
être (be)suisesestsommesêtessont
avoir (have)aiasaavonsavezont
aller (go)vaisvasvaallonsallezvont
faire (do/make)faisfaisfaitfaisonsfaitesfont

The Passé Composé

The standard spoken past tense is the passé composé: auxiliary (avoir or être) + past participle. Most verbs take avoir; motion/state-change verbs and all reflexives take être with past-participle agreement:

  • J’ai parlé — I spoke/have spoken
  • Elle est partie — She left (être; participle agrees: partie)

History

French verbal morphology derives from Latin, retaining Latin’s personal endings in modified form. The passé composé replaced the Latin perfect form for most uses by the modern period; the passé simple (synthetic past) survives only in formal written French. The auxiliary avoir/être distinction in the passé composé developed from periphrastic constructions in Late Latin.

Common Misconceptions

  • “All six persons are audibly distinct in French” — Not for -er verbs in the present; spoken French marks person primarily through obligatory subject pronouns
  • “Être auxiliary is used for all motion verbs” — Être takes a specific group of verbs (the “DR+MRS VANDERTRAMP” mnemonic list) plus all reflexives; many common motion verbs use avoir

Criticisms

  • The prescriptive emphasis on written morphology in formal instruction can leave learners unable to process rapid spoken French where most present-tense distinctions are phonologically erased

Social Media Sentiment

French verb conjugation is consistently cited as a major difficulty, with irregular verbs and the avoir/être auxiliary split as top pain points. The written/spoken gap surprises learners who practiced writing before listening. Last updated: 2026-04

Practical Application

  • Teach spoken and written paradigms together from the beginning, highlighting merger in spoken forms
  • Drill être-auxiliary verbs as a fixed list; these must be memorized

Related Terms

See Also

Research

  • Price, G. (2003). A Comprehensive French Grammar (5th ed.). Blackwell. — Comprehensive reference on French verbal morphology.
  • Valdman, A. (1974). French Phonology and Morphology. MIT Press. — Classic treatment of French verbal morphology and spoken/written gaps.
  • Hawkins, R. (2001). Second Language Syntax: A Generative Introduction. Blackwell. — L2 acquisition of French verbal morphology.