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Point de départ In French, as in English, the subject of a verb is the person or thing that carries out the action. The verb expresses the action itself.

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Presentation on theme: "Point de départ In French, as in English, the subject of a verb is the person or thing that carries out the action. The verb expresses the action itself."— Presentation transcript:

1 Point de départ In French, as in English, the subject of a verb is the person or thing that carries out the action. The verb expresses the action itself. © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

2 Subject pronouns replace a noun that is the subject of a verb.
© and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

3 Subject pronouns (continued)
Subject pronouns in French show number (singular vs. plural) and gender (masculine vs. feminine). When a subject consists of both genders, use the masculine form. © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

4 Subject pronouns (continued)
Use tu for informal address and vous for formal. Vous is also the plural form of you, both informal and formal. © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

5 Subject pronouns (continued)
The subject pronoun on refers to people in general, just as the English subject pronouns one, they, or you sometimes do. On can also mean we in a casual style. On always takes the same verb form as il and elle. © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

6 The verb être Être (to be) is an irregular verb; its conjugation (set of forms for different subjects) does not follow a pattern. The form être is called the infinitive; it does not correspond to any particular subject. © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

7 The verb être (continued)
Note that the -s of the subject pronoun vous is pronounced as an English z in the phrase vous êtes. © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

8 C’est and il/elle est Use c’est or its plural form ce sont plus a noun to identify who or what someone or something is. Except with proper names, an article must always precede the noun. © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

9 C’est and il/elle est (continued)
Use the phrases il/elle est and ils/elles sont to refer to someone or something previously mentioned. Any noun that follows directly must not be accompanied by an article or adjective. © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.

10 Essayez! Fill in the blanks with the correct forms of the verb être.
1. Je _______ ici. 4. Nous _______ à Québec. 2. Ils _______ intelligents. 5. Vous _______ Mme Lacroix? 3. Tu _______ étudiante. 6. Marie _______ chanteuse. suis © and ® 2011 Vista Higher Learning, Inc.


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