Tuesday, October 22, 2019
How to Conjugate Voler (to Fly, Steal) in French
How to Conjugate Voler (to Fly, Steal) in French The French verb voler has two very interesting meanings. While it may be used for to fly, as in an airplane or as a bird does, it may also mean to steal, as in robbing someone or taking something. In orer to use voler properly, you will need to commit its conjugations to memory. A quick lesson will introduce you to the essentials you need to know. The Basic Conjugations of Voler French verb conjugations can be a challenge because you have more words to memorize than you would in English. Thats because the verb changes not only with the tense but for every subject pronoun within each tense as well. The good news is that voler is a regular -er verb. It follows some very common rules of conjugation and youll use these for the majority of French verbs. That makes each new one you study just a bit easier than the last. The first step in any conjugation is to find the radical of the verb (its stem). In this case, that is vol-. With that, use the table to study the different endings you need to apply for the present, future, and imperfect past tenses. For example, I am flying is je vole and we stole is nous volions. Present Future Imperfect je vole volerai volais tu voles voleras volais il vole volera volait nous volons volerons volions vous volez volerez voliez ils volent voleront volaient The Present Participle of Voler The present participle of regular verbs is formed by adding -ant to the radical. For voler, this gives us volant. Voler in the Compound Past Tense The passà © composà ©Ã‚ is common in the French language. It is the compound past tense and its relatively easy to construct. You will begin by conjugating avoir, the auxiliary verb, to fit your subject in the present tense. Then, all you need to do is add the past participle volà ©. This gives us jai volà ©Ã‚ for I flew and nous avons volà ©Ã‚ for we stole. More Simple Conjugations of Voler Whenever you need to bring the act of flying or stealing into question, the subjunctive can be used. If, however, the act is dependent on something, then youll need the conditional. In written French, youll likely encounter the passà © simple or the imperfect subjunctive forms of voler as well. Subjunctive Conditional Pass Simple Imperfect Subjunctive je vole volerais volai volasse tu voles volerais volas volasses il vole volerait vola volt nous volions volerions volmes volassions vous voliez voleriez voltes volassiez ils volent voleraient volrent volassent The French imperative form drops all formality, along with the subject pronoun. When using it for short sentences, you can simplify it from tu vole to vole. Imperative (tu) vole (nous) volons (vous) volez
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