Difference between revisions of "Language/French/Grammar/Impersonal-verbs"
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A number of verbs only exist in an impersonal (and infinitive) form. They only take the pronoun il as their subject, which in this case does not refer to a person or thing: i.e. it is an impersonal use. | A number of verbs only exist in an impersonal (and infinitive) form. They only take the pronoun il as their subject, which in this case does not refer to a person or thing: i.e. it is an impersonal use. | ||
{{French-Grammar-Course-Menu}} | {{French-Grammar-Course-Menu}} | ||
Revision as of 12:55, 26 February 2023
Impersonal verbs
A number of verbs only exist in an impersonal (and infinitive) form. They only take the pronoun il as their subject, which in this case does not refer to a person or thing: i.e. it is an impersonal use.
Videos
French Impersonal Verbs in French : Valoir, Falloir, Pleuvoir - YouTube
French IMPERSONAL VERBS // French conjugation Course ...
Related Lessons
- Optional use of neutral le
- Proper Nouns
- Definite and indefinite articles
- Invariable adjectives
- Masculine and feminine forms of adjectives — A change from a nasal vowel to an oral vowel
- Adjectives
- Use of faire + partitive faire du, de la
- The irregular verb être
- Agreement of past participles with direct objects placed before in relative clauses
- English and French adverb formation
- Indirect and Direct Transitive Verbs
- Mass versus count nouns
- Use of indefinite and partitive articles after the negative forms
- Adjectives agreeing with just one noun
- Pronominal verbs used as passives