Table of Contents

Verb conjugation

The letters in the square brackets ([…]) are not pronounced

Regular verbs

If the subject is singular:

verb
je (stem)[e] first person (if it starts with a consonant)
j' (stem)[e] first person (if it starts with a vowel)
tu (stem)[es] second person
il (stem)[e] third person (if the subject is masculine)
elle (stem)[e] third person (if the subject is feminine)

If the subject is plural:

verb
nous (stem)ons first person
vous (stem)ez second person
ils (stem)ent third person (if the subject is masculine)
ells (stem)ent third person (if the subject is feminine)

Some regular verbs:

Irregular verbs

être “to be”
je suis[s] first person singular
tu es second person singular
il/elle e[st] third person singular
nous somm[es] first person plural
vous êt[es] second person plural
ils son[t] third person plural

Relational prepositions

devant in front
derrière behind
dans in/inside
sous below/under
sur above/on top of
à côté de next to/beside
près de near/close
loin de far
en face de facing

Questions

Prefix with “Est-ce que” (or “Est-ce qu'” if in front of a vowel) for ???

“Quel est” (or “Quelle est” for feminine subjects) for “What is”?

Also possible to make a statement a question, but in writing should end in a question mark. In speech, I think intontation is used as a hint.

Vocabulary

la banque A bank
la bibliothèque A library
le bureau de poste A post office (le poste is also used)
le chambre A room
le cinéma A movie theatre
le déjeuner Literally lunch, “le petite déjeuner” is breakfast
l'ecole A school
l'église A church (not a cathedral)
les feux de signalisation
l'hôpital A hospital
l'hôtel A hotel
le magasin
le parc A park
le parking
le prix The price
la place
le restaurant A restaurant
la rue A road
le stade A stadium
la station-service
la statue A statue
le trottoir The sidewalk
l'usine