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Les verbes (verbs) are doing words: they express an action performed by the subject of the sentence (a noun or a pronoun). In addition to physical actions, verbs can also describe processes, concepts, states and thoughts. Some typical French action verbs include courir, danser, sauter, chanter, écrire, lire, etc.
- Avoir and Être
Avoir vs. être. The verbs avoir to have and être to be are...
- Participles
We also use certain past participles as adjectives. The past...
- Nouns
Les noms or les substantifs (nouns) are naming words: they...
- Avoir and Être
Adjectives are descriptive words. They indicate how something or someone is (e.g. good, fast ). Adjectives have comparative forms, and in French they agree with the grammatical gender of the noun they are describing.
26 Μαρ 2016 · It can be the object of the verb, as the noun lune in: Nous regardons la lune. (We watch the moon.) French articles. An article (un article) is a small but essential little word that introduces a noun and takes its gender and number. Articles come in three types: The definite articles: le, la, l’, and les (the).
Les noms or les substantifs (nouns) are naming words: they refer to people (la fille), places (la France), animals (le chat), objects (la table) and concepts (l’amour). A noun can be a subject or an object in a sentence. They are often accompanied by an article and can be described by adjectives.
How do you make French adjectives agree with the nouns they describe? Which French adjectives have irregular forms? How do you make French adjectives plural? What are some invariable French adjectives? What is the word order with French adjectives? How do you form comparative adjectives in French? How do you form superlative adjectives in French?
In French, there are suffixes that help to form a noun from a verb, especially in the domain of abstraction. You will understand them easily because the English language has inherited most of these French suffixes. Here are the main ones: -ment : raffiner -> raffinement, engager -> engagement, régler -> règlement, confiner -> confinement...
Nouns in French have very much the same characteristics as nouns in English and may be used in very much the same ways. What follows is a brief résumé of their major general characteristics and uses.