Friday, May 15, 2020
Learn How to Conjugate Sécher (to Dry) in French
Meaning to dry, the French verb sà ©cher will be a good addition to your vocabulary. In order to say she dried or we will dry, however, you will need to study its conjugations. That is the focus of this introductory French lesson. The Basic Conjugations of Sà ©cher Sà ©cher is a stem-changing verb and that does throw a wrench into the conjugations. However, it is relatively easy to handle when you know what to look for. Pay close attention to the indicative mood forms of sà ©cher and youll notice that sometimes the accented à ©Ã‚ changes to à ¨. This happens most often in the present tense and the future gives you an option between the two. Other than that, sà ©cher follows the conjugation rules of any regular -er verb. You can use the same endings you know for words like tomber (to fall) and apply them here. To study these, simply find the conjugation that corresponds to both the subject pronoun and the tense of your sentence. This results in je sà ¨che for I am drying and nous sà ©chiez for we dried. Present Future Imperfect je sche scheraischerai schais tu sches scherasscheras schais il sche scheraschera schait nous schons scheronsscherons schions vous schez scherezscherez schiez ils schent scherontscheront schaient The Present Participle of Sà ©cher The present participle of sà ©cher does not get the stem change. Instead, you will simply add -ant to the stem to form sà ©chant. Sà ©cher in the Compound Past Tense Passà © composà ©Ã‚ is the French compound past tense. This is where youll use the past participle sà ©chà ©Ã‚ along with the help of an auxiliary verb. To form it, begin by conjugating avoir into the present tense, then add the past participle. This gives us jai sà ©chà ©Ã‚ for I dried and nous avons sà ©chà ©Ã‚ for we dried. More Simple Conjugations of Sà ©cher You will need to pay attention to the stem change in these forms of sà ©cher as well, particularly in the subjunctive, which calls the act of drying into question. The conditional gives you the choice between the two forms because it implies that something will only be dried in the future if certain conditions are met. There is no stem change in either the passà © simple or the imperfect subjunctive, both of which are literary tenses. Subjunctive Conditional Pass Simple Imperfect Subjunctive je sche scheraisscherais schai schasse tu sches scheraisscherais schas schasses il sche scheraitscherait scha scht nous schions scherionsscherions schmes schassions vous schiez scheriezscheriez schtes schassiez ils schent scheraientscheraient schrent schassent For short sentences, you may use sà ©cher in the imperative. Beyond the stem change in the tu form, youll also need to remember that the subject pronoun is not required here. Imperative (tu)    sà ¨che​​ (nous)  sà ©chons​​ (vous)  sà ©chez
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