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→ se = indirect object ( téléphoné à qui? – who did they call?) Marie and Laurent had called each other on the phone. Remember: the participe passé never agrees with an indirect object.Įxample: Marie et Laurent s’étaient téléphoné. The exception to this concerns direct objects: the participle does not agree if the reflexive verb is followed by a direct object.

  • In the case of reflexive verbs (which always take être as their auxiliary in the plus-que-parfait), the participle generally agrees with the subject.Įxample: Nous nous étions lev és très tôt.
  • Son père avait acheté des places ce concert. She had bought a flute.Įlle avait rencontré d’autres artistes. She had bought a drum.Įlle avait acheté une flûte. This direct object can take three possible forms: a personal pronoun (me, te, la, nous, vous, les), the relative pronoun que, or a noun placed before the verb (usually in questions and exclamations).Įxample: Elle avait acheté un tambour.
  • For verbs that take avoir in the plus-que-parfait, the participle only agrees in gender and number with a direct object that comes before the verb.
  • They (only women) had gone to music school. They had gone to music school.Įlles étaient all ées à l’école de musique. He had gone to music school.Įlle était all ée à l’école de musique.
  • When a verb takes être as a help verb, the participle agrees in gender and number with the subject.Įxample: Il était all é à l’école de musique.
  • This agreement is necessary in the following cases: Agreement of the participe passéįor some verbs, the participe passé has to agree in gender and number with either the subject or the object of the sentence.
  • If the infinitive ends in -re, the participle ends in uįor the irregular verbs, however, we have to look up the participle forms in the list of irregular verbs or check the verb conjugator – or simply learn the correct forms by heart.
  • If the infinitive ends in - ir, the participle ends in i Example: fin ir – fin i.
  • If the infinitive ends in -er, the participle ends in é Example: aim er – aim é.
  • Example: À quelle heure étais -tu sorti ce matin-là ? What time had you left that morning? no direct object, sortir = leave but: Avais-tu sorti les carottes du frigo hier soir ? Had you taken the carrots out of the fridge yesterday evening? direct object: les carottes, sortir = take out Participe passé: the past participleįor the regular - er/- ir/-re verbs, the participe passé is easy to construct: In this case, the meaning of the verb often changes. We use avoir when descendre, (r)entrer, (re)monter, retourner and sortir are followed by a direct object. I had gone to Brittany on holiday.Ĭheck out our page on avoir/être to pick up some tips on remembering which verbs take être as their auxiliary in the compound tenses.
  • with the following verbs of movement and their related forms: naître/mourir to be born/to die, aller/venir to go/to come, monter/descendre to go up/to go down, arriver/partir to arrive/to leave, entrer/sortir to enter/to go out, apparaître to appear, rester to stay, retourner to return, tomber to fall and their related forms such as: revenir to come back, rentrer to go back in, remonter to go back up, redescendre to go back down, repartir to leave again.Įxample: J’ étais parti(e) en vacances en Bretagne.
  • with reflexive verbs Example: Je m’étais trompé(e) dans mon calcul.
  • Most verbs construct the plus-que-parfait using avoir, however être is used as the auxiliary verb in the following cases: Example: Je ne m’étais pas trompé dans mon calcul. I had left.→ I had not left.įor reflexive verbs, the reflexive pronoun comes after the first part of the negation (ne) and before the auxiliary verb (avoir/être). In negative sentences, the past participle comes after the second part of the negation (pas).








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