Difference between revisions of "Language/French/Grammar/Directly-transitive-verbs-take-the-auxiliary-“avoir”"

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<div style="font-size:300%"> Directly transitive verbs take the auxiliary “avoir”</div>
<div style="font-size:300%"> Directly transitive verbs take the auxiliary “avoir”</div>


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All transitive verbs take the auxiliary avoir in compound tenses, whether the object is present or omitted:
All transitive verbs take the auxiliary avoir in compound tenses, whether the object is present or omitted:
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{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|French
!French
|Translation
!Translation
|-
|-
|Elle a quitté le Pays de Galles 
|Elle a quitté le Pays de Galles 

Revision as of 14:35, 3 November 2021

French-Language-PolyglotClub.png
Directly transitive verbs take the auxiliary “avoir”


All transitive verbs take the auxiliary avoir in compound tenses, whether the object is present or omitted:


French Translation
Elle a quitté le Pays de Galles  She has left Wales
J'ai rencontré un ami  I met a friend
Dans la bousculade Laurent avait reçu des coups In the confusion Laurent had been hit
On a attendu  We waited

Other Chapters

Table of Contents

Nouns


Determiners


Personal and impersonal pronouns


Adjectives


Adverbs


Numbers, measurements, time and quantifiers


Verb forms


Verb constructions


Verb and participle agreement


Tense


The subjunctive, modal verbs, exclamatives and imperatives


The infinitive


Prepositions


Question formation


Relative clauses


Negation


Conjunctions and other linking constructions