Comparative Grammar 3.2. Present Perfect Tense in Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, & French

Level I 1. Alphabet & Pronunciation 2. Similarities to English 3. Gender & Plural 4. Cardinal Numbers 5. Subject Personal Pronouns 6. Present Indicative Tense I 7. The Articles 8. Interrogative Pronouns & Adjectives 9. Basic Vocabulary Level II 1. Prepositions 2. Present Indicative Tense II – Irregular Verbs 3. Possessive Adjectives & Pronouns 4. Demonstrative Pronouns & Adjectives 5. Object Personal Pronouns 6. Relative Pronouns 7. Ordinal Numbers I 8. “Por” vs. “Para” in Spanish & Portuguese 9. The Verb “To Be”: “Ser” vs. “Estar” in Spanish & Portuguese Level III 1. Verbs like “Gustar” in Spanish & “Piacere” in Italian 2. Present Perfect Tense 3. The Verb “To Know” 4. Indefinite Adjectives & Pronouns 5. Conjunctions 6. Simple Future Tense 7. Telling Time & Describing Weather 8. Adverbs 9. Present Participle & Gerund in French Level IV 1. Degrees of Comparison: Comparatives & Superlatives 2. Past Tense: Preterite vs. Imperfect 3. Reflexive Pronouns & Verbs 4. Expressions Using “To Have” & “To Do” 5. Present Subjunctive Tense I 6. Present Progressive Tense 7. Future Perfect Tense 8. Personal “a” in Spanish Level V 1. The Pronouns “Ci” & “Ne” in Italian and “Y” & “En” in French 2. Past Absolute Tense in Italian & Simple Past Tense in French 3. Imperative Mood & Giving Commands 4. The Conditional Tenses 5. Present Subjunctive Tense II & Future Subjunctive Tense 6. Perfect Subjunctive Tense 7. Partitives 8. Past & Conditional Progressive Tenses 9. The Verb “Acabar” in Spanish & Portuguese Level VI 1. Ordinal Numbers 2. Imperfect Subjunctive Tense 3. Pluperfect Indicative Tense 4. Pluperfect Subjunctive Tense 5. Passive Voice 6. Idiomatic Pronominal Verbs 7. Diminutives & Augmentatives 8. The Past Infinitive
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In this comparative grammar lesson of Romance languages, we study present perfect tense in Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, and French.

Table of Contents

Present Perfect Tense in Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, & French vs English

In English, the present perfect tense is used to describe events that happened in the past and continue in the present.

The present perfect tense in Portuguese, Italian, and French does not always correspond to the present perfect tense in English.

In Spanish, the present perfect tense, like in English, is used to describe events that happened recently or started in the past and continue in the present, e.g., “I have spoken.

In Portuguese, the present perfect tense is used to describe repeated actions in the past that extend to the present. It is more like the present perfect continuous tense in English, e.g., “I have been working hard.”

In Italian and French, the present perfect tense is used to describe events that happened and were completed in the past or happened in the past and continue in the present. Therefore, this tense covers both the present perfect and the simple past tenses in English, that is, “I spoke” and “I have spoken” are both translated to the same tense in Italian and French. In French, this tense is also called the composite past.

In Spanish and Portuguese, the preterite tense is equivalent in many cases to the simple past in English. We will cover the preterite tense in Spanish and Portuguese in Level IV, Lesson 2.

In Summary:

 The present perfect tense is …Example
SPequivalent to “present perfect tense” in Englishe.g., “I have spoken”
PTequivalent to “present perfect continuous tense” in Englishe.g., “I have been speaking”
ITequivalent to “simple past tense” or “present perfect tense” in Englishe.g., “I spoke” or “I have spoken”
FR

Present Perfect Tense in Spanish

The present perfect tense in Spanish, like in English, is used to describe events that happened recently or started in the past and continue in the present.

It is a compound tense, meaning it requires an auxiliary verb, in this case, the irregular verb “haber” in the present tense, followed by the past participle. The auxiliary “haber” serves a similar function to the auxiliary “have” in English, e.g., “I have done my homework.”

“-ar” verbssubject pronoun + “haber” in present tense + (verb stem+ ado)
“-er” verbssubject pronoun + “haber” in present tense + (verb stem+ ido)
“-ir” verbssubject pronoun + “haber” in present tense + (verb stem+ ido)

Let us look at some verb examples and the conjugation of “haber.”

  -ar ending
e.g., hablar
-er ending
e.g., comer
-ir ending
e.g., vivir
yohehabladocomidovivido
has
él/ella/ustedha
nosotros/-ashemos
vosotros/-ashabéis
ellos/ellas/ustedeshan

Here are some examples:

Yo he visitado Egipto.I have visited Egypt.
has bebido el café.You have drunk the coffee.
Ella ha hablado con su madre.She has spoken to her mother.
Nosotros hemos comido.We have eaten.
Ellos han vivido aquí.They have lived here.

Irregular Past Participles

There are a few verbs with irregular past participles that need to be memorized.

VerbPast ParticipleMeaningExamples
abrirabiertoto openHe abierto la puerta.
I have opened the door.
absolverabsueltoto absolveLo han absuelto.
They have absolved him.
cubrircubiertoto coverHemos cubierto el suelo.
We have covered the floor.
decirdichoto sayTe lo he dicho.
I have told you so.
escribirescritoto writeElla ha escrito una carta.
She has written a letter.
freírfritoto fry¿Has frito la papa?
Have you fried the potato?
hacerhechoto doHe hecho la tarea.
I have done the task.
imprimirimpresoto printHe impreso la foto.
I have printed the photo.
morirmuertoto dieÉl ha muerto.
He has died.
ponerpuestoto putÉl nos ha puesto en peligro.
He has put us in danger.
proveerprovistoto provideHemos provisto el agua.
We have provided water.
resolverresueltoto resolveElla ha resuelto el problema.
he has resolved the problem.
romperrototo breakElla ha roto la ventana.
She has broken the window.
satisfacersatisfechoto satisfyMi trabajo me ha satisfecho.
My work has satisfied me.
vervistoto seeNo lo he visto.
I haven’t seen him.
volvervueltoto returnElla no ha vuelto.
She hasn’t returned.

Among the above exceptions, it is acceptable for the verbs “freír,” “imprimir,” and “proveer” to use the past participle in the regular form as “freído,” “imprimido,” and “proveído.” However, only irregular forms are acceptable if used as adjectives.

The verbs above can be used with prefixes that change the meaning, but the irregular form remains the same. For example, the past participles of “revolver” (to scramble), “devolver” (to return), and “envolver” (to wrap) are “revuelto,” “devuelto,” and “envuelto,” respectively, which are all similar to the past participle of the original verb “volver” without the prefix, i.e., “vuelto.”

Another minor orthographic irregularity is in the case of “-er” and “-ir” verbs if the stem ends in a vowel, e.g., the stem of “leer(to read) is “le-.” In this case, the “i” in the past participle ending is accented, i.e., “-ído.” Thus, the past participle of “leer” is “leído.” Other examples include “caer(to fall), “creer” (to believe), “oír(to hear), “poseer” (to possess), “reír” (to laugh), and “traer” (to bring). An exception to the accented “i” rule is verbs with a “-uir” ending. In this case, the “i” is not accented, e.g., “destruir” (to destroy) becomes “destruido.”

Present Perfect Tense in Portuguese

The present perfect tense is used in Portuguese to describe repeated actions in the past that extend to the present. It is more similar to the present perfect continuous tense in English, e.g., “I have been working hard.”

The present perfect is a compound tense, meaning it requires an auxiliary verb, in this case, the irregular verb “ter” or “haver” in the present tense, followed by the past participle. The auxiliary “ter” or “haver” serves a similar function to the auxiliary “have” in English, e.g., “I have done my homework.”

“-ar” verbster”/“haver” in present tense + (verb stem+ ado)
“-er” verbster”/“haver” in present tense + (verb stem+ ido)
“-ir” verbster”/“haver” in present tense + (verb stem+ ido)

Both “ter” and “haver” are grammatically correct and can be used interchangeably. However, the use of “haver” is usually limited to writing. In everyday language, the verb “ter” is often used.

The table below summarizes the conjugation rules of the three verb groups in the present perfect tense:

  -ar ending
e.g., falar
-er ending
e.g., comer
-ir ending
e.g., partir
eutenho/heifaladocomidopartido
ele/ela/vocêtem/há
nóstemos/havemos
eles/elas/vocêstêm/hão

Here are some more examples in context:

Você tem bebido o café.You have been drinking coffee.
Ela tem falado com a mãe.She has been speaking to her mother.
Nós temos comido.We have been eating.
Eles têm vivido aqui.They have been living here.

Irregular Past Participles

1. There are a few verbs with irregular past participles:

VerbPast ParticipleMeaningExamples
abrirabertoto openEu tenho aberto a porta.
I have been opening the door.
cobrircobertoto coverNós temos coberto o chão.
We have been covering the floor.
dizerditoto sayEu te tenho dito isso.
I have been telling you so.
escreverescritoto writeEla tem escrito uma carta.
She has been writing a letter.
fazerfeitoto doEu tenho feito a tarefa.
I have been doing the task.
pôrpostoto putEle nos tem posto em perigo.
He has been putting us in danger.
vervistoto seeEu tenho visto o último evento.
I have been seeing the latest event.
virvindoto comeO homem têm vindo de longe.
The man has been coming from far away.
  • Notice that the past participle and the gerund of the verb “vir(to come) are identical, i.e., “vindo.”
  • The verbs above can be used with prefixes that change the meaning, but the irregular form remains the same. For example, the past participles of the verb “descobrir(to discover) is “descoberto,” which is similar to the past participle of the original verb “cobrir” without the prefix, i.e., “coberto.”

2. There are also some verbs that have both regular and irregular past participles. Here are the most common ones:

aceitarto acceptaceitado, aceito
acenderto turn on or to lightacendido, aceso
dispersarto dispersedispersado, disperso
elegerto electelegido, eleito
entregarto deliverentregado, entregue
expressarto expressexpressado, expresso
exprimirto expressexprimido, expresso
expulsarto expel or to throw outexpulsado, expulso
extinguirto extinguishextinguido, extinto
fritarto fryfritado, frito
ganharto winganhado, ganho
gastarto spendgastado, gasto
impergirto immerseimergido, imerso
limparto cleanlimpado, limpo
matarto killmatado, morto
pagarto paypagado, pago
pegarto getpegado, pego
prenderto arrest or holdprendido, preso
salvarto savesalvado, salvo
soltarto releasesoltado, solto
submergirto submergesubmergido, submerso
suprimirto suppresssuprimido, supresso
suspenderto suspendsuspendido, suspenso

In general, it is preferrable, but not always required, to use the regular form when the past participle is used after the auxiliary “ter” or “haver,” e.g., “Ele tem aceitado(He has been accepting). On the other hand, the irregular shorter form is often used when the past participle is used as an adjective, e.g., “É aceito aqui(It is accepted here).

Present Perfect Tense in Italian

In Italian, the present perfect tense is used to describe events that happened and were completed in the past or happened in the past and continue in the present. Therefore, this tense covers both the present perfect and the simple past tenses in English, that is, “I spoke” and “I have spoken” are both translated to the same tense in Italian.

The present perfect is a compound tense, meaning it requires an auxiliary verb. In English, we use the verb “to have” in the present tense as an auxiliary, e.g., “I have done my homework.”

In Italian, some verbs use the auxiliary “avere(to have), while others use the auxiliary “essere(to be) in the present tense, followed by the past participle.  

The past participle of regular verbs using the auxiliary “avere(to have) is formed by adding the appropriate suffix for “-are,” “-ere,” and “-ire” verbs.

“-are” verbsavere” in the present tense “verb stem” + “-ato
“-ere” verbs “verb stem” + “-uto
“-ire” verbs “verb stem” + “-ito

The past participle of regular verbs using the auxiliary “essere(to be) is formed in a similar way. One additional requirement here is that the suffix of the past participle must agree with the subject in gender and number, that is, the past participle essentially requires the treatment of an adjective.

“-are” verbsessere” in the present tense “verb stem” + “-ato”/ “-ata”/ “-ati”/ “-ate
“-ere” verbs “verb stem” + “-uto”/ “-uta”/ “-uti”/ “-ute
“-ire” verbs “verb stem” + “-ito”/ “-ita”/ “-iti”/ “-ite

Let us look at some examples of verbs conjugated using the auxiliary “avere”:

  -are ending
e.g., parlare
-ere ending
e.g., vendere
-ire ending
e.g., finire
iohoparlatovendutofinito
tuhai
lui/leiha
noiabbiamo
voiavete
lorohanno

Here are some examples in context:

Io ho visitato l’Egitto l’anno scorso.I visited Egypt last year.
Tu hai finito il tuo lavoro.You have finished your work.
Lui ha parlato con sua madre.He spoke with his mother.
Noi abbiamo mangiato tutto il cibo.We have eaten all the food.
Sono sicuro che mi avete sentito ieri sera.I am sure you heard me last night.
Loro hanno lavorato qui per due anni.They worked here for two years.

Now, let us look at some examples of verbs conjugated using the auxiliary “essere”:

  -are ending
e.g., andare
-ere ending
e.g., cadere
-ire ending
e.g., partire
iosonoandato/-acaduto/-apartito/-a
tuseiandato/-acaduto/-apartito/-a
luièandatocadutopartito
leièandatacadutapartita
noisiamoandati/-ecaduti/-epartiti/-e
voisieteandati/-ecaduti/-epartiti/-e
lorosonoandati/-ecaduti/-epartiti/-e

Here are some more examples:

Sono andato in palestra la scorsa settimana.I went to the gym last week.
Sei partito presto ieri sera.You left early last night.
Lui è caduto dalle scale.He fell down the stairs.
Siamo entrati nella stanza.We have entered the room.
Voi siete arrivati tardi la scorsa notte.You arrived late last night.
Ieri loro sono usciti insieme.They went out together yesterday.

Notice that in some of these examples, the present perfect tense in Italian corresponds to the present perfect, whereas in others it corresponds to the simple past tense depending on the context.

Using the Conjugation Auxiliary “Avere” vs. “Essere”

You are perhaps wondering when to use the auxiliary “avere” and when to use the auxiliary “essere” to form the past participle. The vast majority of Italian verbs, including all transitive[1] verbs, are conjugated using the auxiliary “avere.” Thus, it is easier to memorize the verbs that use “essere.” First, all transitive non-reflexive verbs use “avere.” If you can rule that out, the following categories, although not comprehensive, contain most verbs that use “essere”:

  • A group of intransitive verbs related to motion (e.g., to go, to come, to return, to enter, to leave, to fall, to enter, etc.).
andareto goscappareto escape
arrivareto arrivescendereto go down or descend
cadereto falltornareto return
entrareto enteruscireto go out
partireto leavevenireto come
salireto go up  

Remember that all the verbs above that use “essere” are motion-related. However, not all motion-related verbs use “essere.” This should serve as a guideline to help you memorize the verbs in this category.

  • A group of intransitive verbs related to change or transformation (e.g., to become, to be born, to die, to appear, to disappear, to lose weight, etc.).
apparireto appearingrandireto get bigger
cambiareto changemigliorareto get better
crescereto growmorireto die
dimagrireto lose weightnascereto be born
diminuireto diminishpeggiorareto get worse
dipendere dato depend on or causesparireto disappear
diventareto becomesvanireto vanish
guarireto healvolareto fly

Notice that the above verbs use “essere” only when they are in transitive form, that is when there is a direct object acted upon. If the verb is transitive, “avere” must be used. For example:

VerbExample
cambiare
to change
È cambiato molto di recente.He has changed a lot recently.
Ha cambiato il mondo.He has changed the world.
crescere
to raise or grow
È cresciuta in città.She grew up in the city.
Ha cresciuto tre figli.She raised three children.
guarire
to heal
La mia pelle è guarita.My skin has healed.
La crema ha guarito la mia pelle.The cream healed my skin.
  • Verbs that are always in the third-person, e.g., “costare(to cost), “durare(to last), “occorrere(to take or to be necessary), “succedere(to happen), etc. Here are some examples:
VerbMeaningExample
costareto costMi è costato molto.
It has cost me a lot.
durareto lastIl volo è durato un’ora.
The flight lasted one hour.
occorrereto be necessary or to takeSono occorsi tre giorni per dipingere la casa.
It took three days to paint the house.
succedereto happenPer favore, dimmi cosa è successo.
Please, tell me what happened.
VerbMeaningExample
bastareto be enoughIl cibo gli è bastato.
The food was enough for him.
importareto be importantNon ci è importato.
We didn’t care.
mancareto missMi è mancata mia sorella.
I missed my sister.
parereto seemL’idea mi è parsa ragionevole.
The idea seemed reasonable to me.
sembrareto seemQuesto ragazzo mi è sembrato strano.
This guy seemed strange to me.
servireto need or be of useMi è servito un altro libro.
I needed one more book.
  • All reflexive verbs, which will be covered in detail in Level IV, Lesson 3, e.g., “chiamarsi(to call oneself), “lavarsi(to wash oneself), etc.

Irregular Past Participles

There are some verbs with irregular past participles that need to be memorized.

VerbPast ParticipleMeaningExamples
accendereaccesoto switch onAll’arrivo, ha acceso la luce.
Upon arrival, he turned on the light.
aprireapertoto openHo aperto la porta.
I have opened the door.
berebevutoto drinkQuanto hai bevuto?
How much did you drink?
chiederechiestoto askMi ha chiesto di aiutarlo.
He asked me to help him.
chiuderechiusoto closeOggi il negozio ha chiuso tardi.
The shop closed late today.
coprirecopertoto coverHo coperto il pavimento.
I have covered the floor.
correrecorsoto runOggi ho corso di mattina.
Today I ran in the morning.
cuocerecottoto cookHa cotto una bella bistecca.
He cooked a nice steak.
decideredecisoto decideAbbiamo deciso di partire.
We decided to leave.
diredettoto sayTe l’ho detto dall’inizio.
I told you from the beginning.
discuterediscussoto discussHanno discusso l’argomento.
They discussed the topic.
divideredivisoto divideHo diviso la torta a fette.
I divided the cake into slices.
farefattoto doHo fatto tutto il lavoro.
I have done all the work.
friggerefrittoto fryHai fritto la patata?
Have you fried the potato?
leggerelettoto readHai letto questo articolo?
Have you read this article?
metteremessoto putHo messo la roba nel furgone.
I put the stuff in the van.
moriremortoto dieÈ morto l’anno scorso.
He died last year.
nascerenatoto be bornÈ nato e cresciuto qui.
He was born and raised here.
offendereoffesoto offendMi dispiace se ti ho offeso.
I’m sorry if I offended you.
perderepersoto loseHo perso le chiavi.
I lost my keys.
piangerepiantoto cryHa pianto per la sua perdita.
He cried over his loss.
porrepostoto putAbbiamo posto fine a questo.
We have put an end to this.
ridererisoto laughHo riso quando me l’hanno detto.
I laughed when they told me.
rimanererimastoto remainSono rimasti con noi per due notti.
They stayed with us for two nights.
risolvererisoltoto resolveLei ha risolto il problema.
She has resolved the problem.
rompererottoto breakLei ha rotto la finestra.
She has broken the window.
soddisfaresoddisfattoto satisfyIl mio lavoro mi ha soddisfatto.
My work has satisfied me.
sceglieresceltoto chooseHo scelto questo prodotto.
I chose this product.
scenderescesoto descend or go downLui è sceso le scale.
He went down the stairs.
scriverescrittoto writeHa scritto una lettera.
She has written a letter.
soffriresoffertoto sufferHa sofferto molto nella vita.
He has suffered a lot in life.
spegnerespentoto switch offHa spento la luce ed è uscito.
He turned off the light and went out.
tradurretradottoto translateHo tradotto il documento.
I have translated the document.
vederevistoto seeNon l’ho visto.
I haven’t seen him.
venirevenutoto comeNon è ancora venuta.
She hasn’t come yet.
vincerevintoto winHa vinto molto facilmente.
He won very easily.
viverevissutoto liveHanno vissuto qui per anni.
They have lived here for years.
  • Some verbs have both regular and irregular past participle forms:
VerbMeaningRegular Past Part.Irregular Past Part.
vedereto seevedutovisto
perdereto loseperdutoperso
succedereto happensuccedutosuccesso
seppellireto buryseppellitosepolto
cedereto searchcedutocesso

Although both regular and irregular forms are considered grammatically correct, note the following:

  1. Except for the verb “cedere,” the use of irregular forms is more common in daily spoken language.
  2. The use of “veduto,” “perduto,” and “succeduto” is often found in literary domain and may sound archaic.
  3. The regular form “perduto” is often used in the context of morality or soul-searching, e.g., “anima perduta(lost soul). In the context of losing one’s way or going astray, the irregular form is often used, e.g., “Ho perso la mia strada(I have lost my way).
  4. The regular form “succeduto” is often only used when “succedere” means “to succeed, as in: “Il re è succeduto a suo padre(The king succeeded his father).
  5. The irregular form “cesso” of the verb “cedere” is used in colloquial language as a noun meaning “toilet.
  6. The verbs above can be used with prefixes that change the meaning, but the irregular form remains the same. For example, the verb “rivedere,” derived from “vedere,” has two past participle forms: “riveduto” and “rivisto.” Similarly, the past participle of the verb “assolvere(to absolve) is “assolto,” similar to “risolto,” the past participle of “risolvere(to resolve).

Composite Past Tense in French

The compound past tense, or the passé composé in French, is used to describe events that happened and were completed in the past or happened in the past and continue in the present. In French, this tense covers both the present perfect and the simple past tenses in English, that is, “I spoke” and “I have spoken” are both translated to the same tense in French.

The compound past is a compound tense, meaning it requires an auxiliary verb. In English, we use the verb “to have” in the present tense as an auxiliary to form the present perfect tense, e.g., “I have done my homework.”

In French, some verbs use the auxiliary “avoir(to have), while others use the auxiliary “être(to be) in the present tense, followed by the past participle. 

The past participle of regular verbs using the auxiliary “avoir(to have) is formed by adding the appropriate suffix for “-er,” “-ir,” and “-re” verbs.

“-er” verbsavoir” in the present tense “verb stem” + “-é
“-ir” verbs “verb stem” + “-i
“-re” verbs “verb stem” + “-u

The past participle of regular verbs using the auxiliary “être(to be) is formed in a similar way. One additional requirement here is that the suffix of the past participle must agree with the subject in gender and number, that is, the past participle essentially requires the treatment of an adjective.

“-er” verbsêtre” in the present tense “verb stem” + “-é”/ “-ée”/ “-és”/ “-ées
“-ir” verbs “verb stem” + “-i”/ “-ie”/ “-is”/ “-ies
“-re” verbs “verb stem” + “-u”/ “-ue”/ “-us”/ “-ues

Let us look at some examples of verbs conjugated using the auxiliary “avoir”:

  -er ending e.g., parler-ir ending e.g., finir-re ending e.g., vendre
j’aiparléfinivendu
tuas
il/elle/ona
nousavons
vousavez
ils/ellesont

Here are some more examples:

J’ai visité l’Egypte l’année dernière.I visited Egypt last year.
Tu as terminé ton travail.You have finished your work.
Il a parlé avec sa mère.He spoke with his mother.
Nous avons mangé toute la nourriture.We have eaten all the food.
Je suis sûr que vous m’avez entendu hier soir.I am sure you heard me last night.
Ils ont travaillé ici pendant deux ans.They worked here for two years.

Notice that in some of these examples, the compound past in French corresponds to the present perfect, whereas in others it corresponds to the simple past tense depending on the context.

Now, let us look at some examples of verbs conjugated using the auxiliary “être”:

  -er ending e.g., aller-ir ending e.g., partir-re ending e.g., descendre
jesuisallé(e)parti(e)descendu(e)
tuesallé(e)parti(e)descendu(e)
il/onestallépartidescendu
elleestalléepartiedescendue
noussommesallé(e)sparti(e)sdescendu(e)s
vousêtesallé(e)sparti(e)sdescendu(e)s
ilssontalléspartisdescendus
ellessontalléespartiesdescendues

Here are some more examples:

Je suis allé à la gym la semaine dernière.I went to the gym last week.
Tu es parti tôt hier soir.You left early last night.
Elle est tombée dans les escaliers.She fell down the stairs.
Nous sommes entrés dans la salle.We have entered the room.
Vous êtes arrivés tard hier soir.You arrived late last night.
Ils sont sortis ensemble hier.They went out together yesterday.

Using the Conjugation Auxiliary “Avoir” vs. “Être”

Finally, we discuss when to use the auxiliary “avoir” and the auxiliary “être” to form the past participle. The vast majority of French verbs, including all transitive[2] non-reflexive verbs, are conjugated using the auxiliary “avoir.” Thus, it is easier to memorize the verbs that use “être.” There are two main categories of verbs that use the auxiliary “être”:

  1. Some intransitive verbs related to motion (e.g., to go, to come, to return, to enter, to leave, to fall, to enter, etc.) and a few others related to change or transformation (e.g., to become, to be born, to die, to lose weight, etc.).
allerto goéchapperto escape
arriverto arrivedescendreto go down or descend
tomberto falltournerto turn
entrerto enterretourner revenir rentrerto return [3]
partirto leavesortirto go out
monterto climb or go upvenirto come
resterto staydemeurerto remain
naîtreto be bornmourirto die
devenirto becomepasserto pass
diminuerto diminishmaigrirto lose weight

Remember that all the verbs above that use “être” are either motion or transformation-related. However, not all motion and transformation-related verbs use “être.” This should only serve as a guideline to help you memorize the verbs in this category.

Notice that the above verbs use “être” only when they are in intransitive form, that is when there is no direct object acted upon. If the verb is transitive, “avoir” must be used. For example:

VerbExample
retourner
to return
Il est retourné au travail hier.He returned to work yesterday.
J’ai retourné l’enveloppe.I returned the envelope.
passer
to pass or spend
Je suis passé par le parc.I passed by the park.
J’y ai passé deux jours.I spent two days there.
entrer
to enter
Il est entré dans la pièce.He entered the room.
Il a entré les données dans le fichier.He entered the data into the file.
  • All reflexive verbs, which will be covered in detail in Level IV, Lesson 3, e.g., “s’appeler(to call oneself), “se laver(to wash oneself), etc.

Irregular Past Participles

Some verbs have irregular past participles and need to be memorized.

VerbPast ParticipleMeaningExamples
acquériracquisto acquireIl a acquis la nouvelle maison.
He acquired the new house.
apprendreappristo learnElle a appris le français si vite.
She learned French so quickly.
avoireuto haveJ’ai eu mal à la tête.
I had a headache.
boirebuto drinkCombien as-tu bu?
How much did you drink?
comprendrecompristo understandJ’ai compris les consignes.
I understood the instructions.
conduireconduitto driveJ’ai conduit trois heures.
I drove three hours.
craindrecraintto fearIls ont craint l’ennemi.
They feared the enemy.
devoirmustJ’ai me lever tôt aujourd’hui.
I had to wake up early today.
direditto sayIls nous ont dit que c’était fermé.
They told us it was closed.
écrireécritto writeElle a écrit une lettre.
She has written a letter.
êtreététo beNous avons été occupés.
We have been busy.
fairefaitto doJ’ai fait tout le travail.
I have done all the work.
falloirfalluto have toIl a fallu ajuster la taille.
They had to adjust the size.
lireluto readAvez-vous lu cet article?
Have you read this article?
mettremisto putJ’ai mis les affaires dans le van.
I put the stuff in the van.
mourirmortto dieIl est mort l’année dernière.
He died last year.
naîtreto be bornIl est et a été élevé ici.
He was born and raised here.
offriroffertto offerIl a offert son aide.
He offered to help.
ouvrirouvertto loseJ’ai ouvert la porte.
I have opened the door.
peindrepeintto paintIl a peint le paysage.
He painted the landscape.
plairepluto pleaseJ’espère que l’endroit t’a plu.
I hope you liked the place.
pleuvoirpluto rainIl a plu hier soir.
It rained last night.
pouvoirpucanNous n’avons pas pu sortir hier.
We couldn’t go out yesterday.
prendrepristo takeIl a pris des photos de la voiture.
He took photos of the car.
recevoirreçuto receiveIl a reçu ma lettre.
He received my letter.
rirerito laughJ’ai ri quand ils me l’ont dit.
I laughed when they told me.
savoirsuto knowIl a su nous orienter.
He knew how to guide us.
suivresuivito followElle a suivi les règles.
She has followed the rules.
vivrevécuto liveIls ont vécu ici pendant des années.
They have lived here for years.
voirvuto seeJe ne l’ai pas vu.
I haven’t seen him.
vouloirvouluto wantElle a voulu juste une tranche.
She wanted just one slice.

[1] A verb is transitive if it requires an object. For example, the “to bring” can only be transitive, because the meaning is not complete without an object, e.g., “I bring.

[2] A verb is transitive if it requires an object. For example, the “to bring” can only be transitive, because the meaning is not complete without an object, e.g., “I bring.

[3] The three verbs “retourner,” “revenir,” and “rentrer” can all be used to mean “to return”:

  • The verb “retourner” means “to go back to where the speaker is not, e.g., “J’habitais à Paris quand j’étais jeune. Je vais y retourner cet été(I lived in Paris when I was young. I will return this summer). It can also mean “to return (something), e.g., “Je vais retourner le livre demain(I will return the book tomorrow).
  • The verb “revenir” means “to return to where the speaker is, that is, to come back, e.g., “Il est déjà parti mais il va bientôt revenir(He has already left but will return soon).
  • The verb “rentrer” means “to return (home), where “home” can refer to a house, country, place of residence, etc., e.g., “Je vais rentrer chez moi à midi(I will return home at noon).

Next: The Verb “To Know”

Back to: Comparative Grammar Lessons

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