Friday, January 3, 2020

How Is Croiser Conjugated in French

The French verb  croiser  means to fold or to cross, pass, or cut across. This is a slightly different meaning than the verb  traverser (to cross). In order to use  croiser  in the past, present, or future tense, it needs to be conjugated. French students who dread conjugations will be delighted to know that this ones pretty straightforward. Conjugating the French Verb  Croiser Croiser  is a  regular -ER verb  and it follows the verb conjugation pattern of similar verbs like  confier  (to confide),  cacher  (to hide), and many other verbs. Its the most common pattern in the French language and the conjugations become easier with each new one you learn. To conjugate  croiser, you will begin with the verb stem of  crois-. To this, a variety of common endings is added according to the subject pronoun as well as the tense. For instance,   I fold is je croise and we will fold is nous croiserons. Subject Present Future Imperfect je croise croiserai croisais tu croises croiseras croisais il croise croisera croisait nous croisons croiserons croisions vous croisez croiserez croisiez ils croisent croiseront croisaient The Present Participle of  Croiser The  present participle  of croiser  is just as easy. Simply add -ant  to the stem and you have croisant. This works as a verb, but can also be used as an adjective, gerund, or noun in some circumstances. Another Past Tense Form The imperfect is not your only option for the past tense folded.  You can use the  passà © composà ©Ã‚  instead. To do so, conjugate the  auxiliary verb  avoir  according to the subject pronoun, then add the  past participle  croisà ©. As an example, I folded becomes jai croisà © and we folded is nous avons croisà ©. More Simple  Croiser  Conjugations to Learn Those are the most important conjugations, though you may need or encounter one of the following in your French as well. The subjunctive and conditional imply some sort of uncertainty or question to the verb. Those are used more often than the passà © simple and imperfect subjunctive, which are mostly found in writing. Subject Subjunctive Conditional Pass Simple Imperfect Subjunctive je croise croiserais croisai croisasse tu croises croiserais croisas croisasses il croise croiserait croisa croist nous croisions croiserions croismes croisassions vous croisiez croiseriez croistes croisassiez ils croisent croiseraient croisrent croisassent The imperative form may be useful as well and its the easiest of them all. When using  croiser  in the imperative, theres no need for the subject pronoun: use croise rather than tu croise. Imperative (tu) croise (nous) croisons (vous) croisez

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