Friday, March 6, 2020
Learn How to Conjugate Placer (to Place) in French
Learn How to Conjugate Placer (to Place) in French The French verbà placer means to put or to place. You can imagine how useful this word will be in your French conversations, so a lesson in conjugating the verb will certainly help. By the end, youll be able to useà placerà to say things such as she placed and we are placing. The Basic Conjugations ofà Placer French verb conjugations are not always easy because there are many words to memorize and not all verbs follow the regular rules. Unfortunately, placer is a spelling change verb, so it does come with a catch, but its easy to remember if you understand it. For a verb likeà placer,à in which the verb stem ends with aà c, there are times when it requires aà à §. Youll find this most often in the imperfect past tense, though it can appear anywhere that anà aà orà oà come first on the infinitive ending. This change is necessary to retain the softà cà sound. Without it, the vowels would make it sound like cat. Beyond that minor issue, you will find thatà placerà uses the exact same endings as aà regular -erà verb, which is the most common conjugation pattern found in French. If you already know a few of those words, you can apply the same endings to this verb. Using the chart, you can study the most common indicative mood forms of placer. These include the present, future, and imperfect past tenses, which you will use most often. All you need to do is match the subject pronoun to the appropriate tense for your sentence. For example, I am placing is je place and we will place is nous placerons. Present Future Imperfect je place placerai plaais tu places placeras plaais il place placera plaait nous plaons placerons placions vous placez placerez placiez ils placent placeront plaaient The Present Participle ofà Placer The spelling change is also required for placers present participle. Thats because it uses the -ant ending found in many regular verbs. The result is the word plaà §ant. Placerà in the Compound Past Tense Beyond the imperfect, you can also use theà passà © composà ©Ã to indicate the past tense. To form it, you will need two elements: the present tense conjugate ofà avoirà and theà past participleà placà ©.à When you put the two together, you get results such asà jai placà ©Ã (I placed) andà nous avons placà ©Ã (we placed). More Simple Conjugations ofà Placer Placerà has many conjugations, though well finish this lesson with a few more of its simplest forms. Each has its own use and can be useful additions to your French vocabulary. The subjunctive can help you imply uncertainty to the act of placing. The conditional is useful for times when the action is dependent on something else. You will most likely only find the passà © simple and imperfect subjunctive in written French as these are literary tenses. Subjunctive Conditional Pass Simple Imperfect Subjunctive je place placerais plaai plaasse tu places placerais plaas plaasses il place placerait plaa plat nous placions placerions plames plaassions vous placiez placeriez plates plaassiez ils placent placeraient placrent plaassent The French imperative is used for direct commands and statements and this is the one time when its acceptable to skip the subject pronoun. Instead of tu place, you can say place. Imperative (tu) place (nous) plaons (vous) placez
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