1 / 5

Object Pronouns in Passé Composé

Object Pronouns in Passé Composé. French 2 Chapter 4. Passé Composé Review:. To make the past tense in French, use a form of avoir or etre (Vandertramps) as the auxillary verb and add a past participle. J’ ai / je suis Nous avons / sommes Tu as / es Vous avez / êtes

Download Presentation

Object Pronouns in Passé Composé

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Object Pronouns in Passé Composé French 2 Chapter 4

  2. Passé Composé Review: • To make the past tense in French, use a form of avoir or etre (Vandertramps) as the auxillary verb and add a past participle. • J’ai / je suis Nous avons / sommes • Tu as / es Vous avez / êtes • Il/elle on a / est Ils/Elles ont / sont Past Participles – er é, ir  i , re  u

  3. Object Pronouns • The following object pronouns may be used in passé composé with no changes to the verb: • Me, te, nous, vous (as INDIRECT OBJECTS) • Lui, leur • Y • en

  4. Direct Object Pronouns • When using DIRECT object pronouns me, te, nous, vous, le, la, les in passé composé, if the object PRECEDES the auxillary verb, you must add agreement to reflect the OBJECT PRONOUN. • EX: Les pommes? Oui, je lesai achetées au marché. • Francine et moi? Oui, il nousa vues au cinéma. • Gisèle? Oui, nous l’avons vue au cinéma, aussi.

  5. REMEMBER: • You never add agreement for an INDIRECT OBJECT pronoun (me, te, nous, vous, lui, leur – means to/for someone) or Y and EN even when they precede the auxillary verb (but you’ll still add agreement if you have a Vandertramp verb): • La boucherie? Oui, j’ysuis allé ce matin. • La boucherie? Oui, elle yest allée ce matin. (extra e on allé reflects the subject ELLE, not the pronoun y)

More Related