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L’imp ératif. Expressing orders or requests. The tu, nous, & vous forms are used without the subject and their present tense ending:. Écoutez, madame… N’insistez pas, docteur!. For verbs ending in –er, -vrir, & -frir, drop the final s on the tu form:.
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L’impératif Expressing orders or requests
The tu, nous, & vous forms are used without the subject and their present tense ending: • Écoutez, madame… • N’insistez pas, docteur!
For verbs ending in –er, -vrir, & -frir, drop the final s on the tu form: • Regarde plutôt ta sauce! Elle brûle (is burning)! • FAITES ATTENTION! Aller is considered an –er verb for this rule: Va au tableau. • All other regular forms keep the s: Attends!
These 4 verbs have irregular tu, nous, & vous forms: • Avoir: aie (rhymes with lait), ayons, ayez • Être: sois, soyons, soyez • Savoir: sache, sachons, sachez • Vouloir: only the vous form, veuillez is used
For pronominal verbs, & verbs using direct & indirect pronouns, the pronouns follow the verb: • Calme-toi! • Parlez-nous un peu de la France… • Donne-les-lui! (Give them to her!) • Appelez-moi. (Call me.) NOTE: me & te become moi & toi if they are the final element of a command.
In negative commands, the pronoun goes in front of the verb, just like it does in a normal statement: • Ne me réponds pas comme ça! (Don’t answer me like that!) • Ne te rase pas maintenant! (Don’t shave right now!)
REMEMBER:While the tu & vous forms are used to give commands, the nous form is used to suggest rather than command, and includes the person speaking: • Appelez les photographes! (Call the photographers!) • Espérons! (Let’s hope so!)