ir and er ending verbs in french.please !??????
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Yes , these are used in ending of the verbs in French.
1st group: verbs ending in -er.2nd group: verbs ending in -ir, with the gerund ending in -issant.3rd group:1st section: verbs ending in -ir, with the gerund ending in -ant.2nd section: verbs ending in -oir.3rd section: verbs ending in -re.
The first two groups follow a regular conjugation, whereas the third group follows an irregularone. The third group is considered a closed-class conjugation form,[1] meaning that most new verbs introduced to the French language are of the first group (téléviser, atomiser, radiographier), with the remaining ones being of the second group.
1st group: verbs ending in -er.2nd group: verbs ending in -ir, with the gerund ending in -issant.3rd group:1st section: verbs ending in -ir, with the gerund ending in -ant.2nd section: verbs ending in -oir.3rd section: verbs ending in -re.
The first two groups follow a regular conjugation, whereas the third group follows an irregularone. The third group is considered a closed-class conjugation form,[1] meaning that most new verbs introduced to the French language are of the first group (téléviser, atomiser, radiographier), with the remaining ones being of the second group.
anushka120:
i want their conjugation
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Explanation:
There are five main kinds of verbs in French: regular -er, -ir, -re, stem-changing, and irregular. Once you've learned the rules of conjugation for each of the first three kinds of verbs, you should have no problem conjugating regular verbs in each of those categories. Regular -ir verbs are the second-largest category of French verbs. Indeed, these verbs are often referred to as second conjugation verbs.
The verb form that ends in -ir is called the infinitive, and -ir is the infinitive ending. (In English, by contrast, the infinitive is the verb preceded by the word "to.") The French verb with the infinitive ending removed is called the stem or radical.
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