Regular -RE Verbs
Verbes Réguliers en -RE
Regular -RE Verbs in French
Overview
Regular -re verbs are the third and smallest group of regular French verbs. While less numerous than -er verbs, they include many practical everyday words like attendre (to wait), vendre (to sell), répondre (to answer), and descendre (to go down). Mastering this conjugation pattern at the A1 level rounds out your knowledge of all three regular verb groups.
The conjugation follows a clear pattern: remove the -re ending to get the stem, then add the appropriate endings. A notable feature is that the third person singular (il/elle/on) has no ending at all — the bare stem stands alone. This is unique among the three regular verb groups and is a detail worth remembering.
Like -er verbs, several of the conjugated forms sound identical in spoken French, so the subject pronoun becomes essential for clarity.
How It Works
Conjugation Pattern
Using attendre (to wait) as a model:
| Subject | Stem + Ending | Full form |
|---|---|---|
| je | attend + s | j'attends |
| tu | attend + s | tu attends |
| il / elle / on | attend + (nothing) | il attend |
| nous | attend + ons | nous attendons |
| vous | attend + ez | vous attendez |
| ils / elles | attend + ent | ils attendent |
Pronunciation note: J'attends, tu attends, and il attend all sound the same. The final -d is silent, and the -ent in ils attendent is also silent.
Common Regular -RE Verbs
| Verb | English |
|---|---|
| attendre | to wait (for) |
| vendre | to sell |
| répondre | to answer |
| descendre | to go down |
| entendre | to hear |
| perdre | to lose |
| rendre | to give back, to return |
| fondre | to melt |
Examples in Context
| French | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| J'attends le bus. | I'm waiting for the bus. | No preposition needed |
| Tu vends ta voiture ? | Are you selling your car? | Question |
| Il répond au téléphone. | He answers the phone. | No ending for il |
| Elle entend la musique. | She hears the music. | Perception verb |
| Nous descendons l'escalier. | We go down the stairs. | Movement |
| Vous vendez des fleurs ? | Do you sell flowers? | Commerce |
| Ils attendent depuis une heure. | They've been waiting for an hour. | Duration |
| On perd toujours les clés. | We always lose the keys. | On = we |
| Je rends le livre à la bibliothèque. | I return the book to the library. | Giving back |
| Tu entends ce bruit ? | Do you hear that noise? | Asking about perception |
Common Mistakes
Adding an ending for il/elle/on
- Wrong: Il attende le bus.
- Right: Il attend le bus.
- Why: The third person singular of regular -re verbs takes no ending. The stem alone is the correct form.
Confusing "attendre" with "wait for"
- Wrong: J'attends pour le bus.
- Right: J'attends le bus.
- Why: Unlike English "wait for," attendre takes a direct object — no preposition is needed.
Confusing -re verbs with -er verb endings
- Wrong: Je vende la voiture.
- Right: Je vends la voiture.
- Why: Regular -re verbs take -s in the first person singular, not -e. Do not mix up the conjugation patterns.
Practice Tips
- Practice conjugating attendre, vendre, and répondre side by side to reinforce the pattern. Pay special attention to the bare stem in the il/elle/on form.
- Create simple scenarios: waiting for a bus (j'attends le bus), selling something (je vends mon vélo), answering the phone (je réponds au téléphone). Real-life contexts make the verbs stick.
Related Concepts
- Subject Pronouns — pronouns used in conjugation
Prerequisite
Subject PronounsA1More A1 concepts
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