Day 11 — Present Tense: First Group Verbs

1. Topic Introduction

French verbs are divided into groups. The first group verbs are the most regular and the easiest to conjugate.

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A first group verb always ends in -er in the infinitive form.

Examples:

  • parler = to speak
  • aimer = to like
  • travailler = to work
  • chanter = to sing

Important: aller also ends in -er, but it is irregular, so it does not belong to regular first group patterns.

First group verbs are extremely important because they represent thousands of French verbs and form the base of sentence building.

At advanced levels, if these endings are not automatic, complex grammar becomes difficult.


2. What Is an Infinitive Verb?

The infinitive is the base form of a verb.

English examples:

  • to speak
  • to work
  • to study

French examples:

  • parler
  • travailler
  • étudier

Before conjugation, you must identify:

Rule

Remove -er to find the stem.


Example with parler

VerbEnding RemovedStem
parler-erparl

This stem stays constant for regular first group verbs.


3. Present Tense Endings for First Group Verbs

Standard Endings

Subject PronounEnding
je-e
tu-es
il / elle / on-e
nous-ons
vous-ez
ils / elles-ent

These endings are added to the stem.


4. Full Conjugation of parler

Stem = parl

Subject PronounVerb FormPronunciationMeaning
jeparleparlI speak
tuparlesparlyou speak
il / elle / onparleparlhe / she / one speaks
nousparlonspar-lonwe speak
vousparlezpar-layyou speak
ils / ellesparlentparlthey speak

Important pronunciation rule:

Although endings differ in writing, many forms sound the same:

  • parle
  • parles
  • parlent

These sound identical in spoken French.


5. Structure Comparison: Writing vs Pronunciation

FormWritten EndingSpoken Sound
je parle-eparl
tu parles-esparl
ils parlent-entparl

Important:

French spelling shows grammar even when pronunciation is identical.

This is why writing must be mastered carefully.


6. Full Example with Another Verb: aimer

Stem = aim

Subject PronounVerb FormPronunciationMeaning
jeaimeemI like
tuaimesemyou like
il / elleaimeemhe / she likes
nousaimonsay-monwe like
vousaimezay-mayyou like
ils / ellesaimentemthey like

7. Full Example with travailler

Stem = travaill

Subject PronounVerb FormPronunciationMeaning
jetravailletra-vaiI work
tutravaillestra-vaiyou work
il / elletravailletra-vaihe / she works
noustravaillonstra-vai-yonwe work
voustravailleztra-vai-yayyou work
ils / ellestravaillenttra-vaithey work

8. Important Rule: Je Before Vowel

If verb begins with vowel or silent h, je becomes j’.

Example with aimer

Full FormCorrect Form
je aimej’aime

Correct sentence:

J’aime le café.


9. Sentence Building with First Group Verbs

Formula

Subject + Verb + Complement


Examples

French SentenceMeaning
Je parle français.I speak French.
Tu aimes la musique.You like music.
Elle travaille ici.She works here.
Nous chantons bien.We sing well.
Vous regardez un film.You watch a movie.
Ils étudient beaucoup.They study a lot.

10. Common First Group Verbs Comparison Table

InfinitiveMeaningStemPronunciation
parlerto speakparlpar-lay
aimerto likeaimeh-may
travaillerto worktravailltra-vai-yay
chanterto singchantshan-tay
regarderto watchregardruh-gar-day
étudierto studyétudiay-tu-dyay

11. Vocabulary

French WordGenderMeaningPronunciation
la musiquefemininemusiclah mu-zeek
le travailmasculineworkluh tra-vai
le filmmasculinefilmluh film
le cafémasculinecoffeeluh ka-fay
le françaismasculineFrench languageluh fron-say
la chansonfemininesonglah shan-son
la leçonfemininelessonlah luh-son
le livremasculinebookluh leevr
la villefemininecitylah veel
la maisonfemininehouselah meh-zon

12. Mini Paragraph (Memorize)

Je parle français à la maison. Tu regardes un film. Elle travaille dans la ville. Nous aimons la musique. Vous étudiez une leçon. Ils chantent une chanson.

Meaning:

I speak French at home. You watch a film. She works in the city. We like music. You study a lesson. They sing a song.


13. Memory Practice

French SentenceMeaning
Je travaille aujourd’hui.I work today.
Tu chantes bien.You sing well.
Il regarde la télévision.He watches television.
Nous parlons lentement.We speak slowly.
Vous aimez le café.You like coffee.
Elles étudient ensemble.They study together.

Summary Notes

ConceptKey Rule
First group verbsinfinitive ends in -er
Stem formationremove -er
Present endings-e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent
Spoken similaritymany forms sound identical
je before vowelbecomes j’
Agreementverb changes with subject pronoun
Writing importanceendings may be silent but remain grammatically essential