A1

Regular -ER Verbs in French

Verbes Réguliers en -ER

Overview

Regular -er verbs are the backbone of French conjugation. They make up roughly 90% of all French verbs, which means that once you master this pattern, you can conjugate the vast majority of verbs you encounter. At the A1 level, this is one of the most productive grammar points you will learn.

The conjugation pattern is straightforward: remove the -er ending from the infinitive to get the stem, then add the appropriate ending for each subject pronoun. Common -er verbs include parler (to speak), manger (to eat), habiter (to live), travailler (to work), aimer (to like/love), and regarder (to watch).

An important phonetic detail: four of the six present tense forms (je, tu, il/elle, ils/elles) sound identical in spoken French, even though they are spelled differently. The distinctive forms you can hear are nous (-ons) and vous (-ez). This means that in conversation, context and subject pronouns carry the weight of meaning.

How It Works

Conjugation Pattern

Using parler (to speak) as a model:

Subject Stem + Ending Full form
je parl + e je parle
tu parl + es tu parles
il / elle / on parl + e il parle
nous parl + ons nous parlons
vous parl + ez vous parlez
ils / elles parl + ent ils parlent

Pronunciation note: The endings -e, -es, and -ent are all silent. Only -ons and -ez are pronounced.

Spelling Variations

Some -er verbs have minor spelling adjustments to preserve pronunciation:

Verb type Change Example
-ger verbs Add e before -ons nous mangeons (we eat)
-cer verbs cç before -ons nous commençons (we begin)
-yer verbs yi before silent endings j'envoie (I send)

Examples in Context

French English Note
Je parle français. I speak French. Basic statement
Tu manges bien ? Are you eating well? -ger verb
Elle habite à Nice. She lives in Nice. Location
On travaille ensemble. We work together. On = we (casual)
Nous aimons la musique. We love music. With definite article
Vous regardez la télé ? Are you watching TV? Question
Ils écoutent la radio. They listen to the radio. Silent -ent
Je déteste le lundi. I hate Mondays. Strong opinion
Tu cherches quelque chose ? Are you looking for something? Common verb
Nous commençons à huit heures. We start at eight. -cer spelling change

Common Mistakes

Pronouncing the silent endings

  • Wrong: Pronouncing the -ent in ils parlent as "par-lont"
  • Right: Ils parlent sounds exactly like il parle
  • Why: The -ent ending on verbs is always silent. Do not confuse it with the -ent in adverbs like souvent (often), where it is pronounced.

Forgetting spelling changes with -ger and -cer

  • Wrong: nous mangons, nous commencons
  • Right: nous mangeons, nous commençons
  • Why: The e in mangeons keeps the g soft, and the cedilla in commençons keeps the c soft before o.

Confusing -er infinitive with -é past participle

  • Wrong: Je vais mangé. / J'ai manger.
  • Right: Je vais manger. / J'ai mangé.
  • Why: After a conjugated verb or aller, use the infinitive (-er). After avoir/être in the passé composé, use the past participle (-é). They sound the same but have different functions.

Practice Tips

  1. Pick five common -er verbs (parler, manger, habiter, aimer, travailler) and conjugate them aloud with all six subject pronouns every day. Speed and automaticity are the goals.
  2. Write short sentences about your daily routine using -er verbs: Je mange le petit-déjeuner. Je travaille à neuf heures. J'écoute de la musique.
  3. Listen to French speakers and notice that je parle, tu parles, il parle, and ils parlent all sound the same — train your ear to rely on context and pronouns.

Related Concepts

पूर्व-आवश्यकता

Subject PronounsA1

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Regular -ER Verbs in French और अधिक फ़्रेंच व्याकरण का अभ्यास करना चाहते हैं? spaced repetition से पढ़ने के लिए मुफ़्त अकाउंट बनाएं।

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