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Know How To Work Your French “-RE” Verbs!

Verbs are an important part of any language, be it English or French. “-re” to French verbs is what “to” is to English verbs. In English, “to” is the infinite used before the verbs, and in French, “-re” is the infinitive ending for the verbs.

French Verbs

French verbs can be split roughly into 5 main types. The irregular, stem-changing, and regular French verbs can be classified into three types based on their endings. The common French words are classified into –ER,-IR, and –RE ending verbs.

Verbs are conjugated to express different tenses of the same verbs. When it comes to the third group of the regular “-re” verbs in French, they share the pattern irrespective of the moods or tenses. You have to remove the “-re” ending and replace it with a suitable ending based on the tense and the person you are looking for. (First-person, second person or a third person; present tense or past tense)

The irregular French verbs fall under this group of verbs. When the ending is removed, it gives you the stem or radical verbs.

Here are 15 common “-re” French verbs along with their English meanings and the stem form of the word in both languages.

S. No-RE VerbsStem Form

FrenchEnglishFrenchEnglish
1VendreTo sellVendSell
2RepondreTo answerRepondAnswer
3RepandreTo spread; to scatterRepandSpread; scatter
4RenderTo returnRendReturn
5PretenderTo claimPretendClaim
6PerdreTo losePerdLose
7PendreTo hang, to suspendPendHang; suspend
8FondreTo meltFondMelt
9ÉtendreTo stretchEtendStretch
10EntendreTo hearEntendHear
11DescendreTo descendDescendDescend
12DéfendreTo defendDefendDefend
13AttendreTo waitAttendWait
14ConfondreTo confuseConfondConfuse
15CorrespondreTo correspondCorrespondCorrespond

Conjugating “–re” Verbs

Conjugating the verbs mentioned above require you to drop the “re” and add the required pronoun and ending to change the tense of the stem verbs. Let’s take a deeper look into this.

Present Tense

In the words mentioned above, removing the “to” before the English stem verbs will give its present tense. However, the French stem verbs will have different endings depending on the pronouns used before the verbs.

Here is an example to make it easier to understand. Let’s look at how the -re verb “attendre” will change when different pronouns are used for present tense:

PronounEndingConjugated Stem VerbEnglish Version




j’-sj’attendsI wait
Tu-stu attendsYou wait
il/ elle/ onil attend / elle attend / on attendHe wait/ she wait/ one waits
Nous-onsnous attendosWe wait
Vous-ezvous attendezYou wait
ils / ells-entils attendent / ells attendentThey wait

Notice how for English, the present tense of the stem verb stays the same but for in one case, but in French the endings differ based on the pronoun used before the verb.

Past Tense

In the verbs mentioned above, we use “ed” with the stem version of the verbs to get the past tense, but for “lost and “sell.”

For the French verbs given in the table above, the “-re” ending is replaced with “U.” “Vendre” becomes “Vendu”; “Descendre” becomes “Descendu” and so on. The pronouns added before the verb are similar to how they are used in the present tense.

Future Tense

For the English verbs mentioned in the table, you add the word “will ” before the stem version of the verb to get the future tense.

The “re” French verbs are conjugated, similar to how other verbs are conjugated to get the future tense, with one small difference. Instead of losing the entire “-re,” only the final “e” is dropped. The “r” stays, and the different endings are added to this version of the stem verb to get the future tense of the verbs.

Conclusion

Though the French verbs may sound complicated to conjugate, they follow the same style for all types of verbs. Understanding how the stem version of the verbs changes based on the pronoun used before the word is the key to successfully conjugating them. There are many more “-re” verbs apart from the ones mentioned above. However, they all follow the same rule when it comes to conjugating them.