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Conjugating Verbs in FrenchIn French, the dictionary cites each verb in its infinitive form. The infinitive form is the form that does not refer to person, number or time. The equivalent in English is the "to + verb" form, e.g. "to speak".
There are also finite forms of verbs. In English, the finite forms of the verb "to speak" are the verb "speaks", as in "he speaks very quickly", "speak", as in "I speak very quickly", and "spoke", as in "he spoke very quickly". That completes the list of simple finite forms of the verb "to speak". However, each French verb has many more simple finite forms than the equivalent verb in English. The Vocab Builder will help you to learn them. French verbs change their forms according to the person and number of the subject. To see how this works, let us look at a sentence using the verb parler in the present tense.
In this sentence, je ("I") is the subject, and parle ("speak") is the verb. You can see in the table below how the form of parler changes to reflect the person and number of the subject.
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