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Grammaire 1 Passé composé avec être

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Le passé composé avec être

La_maison_etre.jpg

“La Maison” by TomasBat is licensed under CC BY 4.0

Certain verbs must be conjugated with the être auxiliaire in the passé composé. These verbs are often about motion or displacement. Take, for example the following verbs that we have seen already: aller, arriver, descendre, partir, sortir, passer, rentrer, and rester. These verbs are all about “going”, “arriving”, “leaving”, “passing”, “going back” and “staying” — all actions that are related to movement or displacement of a subject.

L’auxiliaire et le participe passé

Conjugating these verbs means two things:

(1) You use être instead of avoir as the auxiliary verb.

(2) the past participle must agree with the subject in gender and number.

Here is the example of the verb aller:

Conjugaison du verbe aller au passé composé

Français Anglais
Je suis allé(e) I went, have gone
tu es allé(e) you went, have gone
il, elle, on est allé(e) he, she, it went, has gone
nous sommes allé(e)s we went, have gone
vous êtes allé(e)(s) you went, have gone
ils, elles sont allé(e)s they went, have gone

 

Just like an adjective, the past participle (le participe passé) of this verb has to agree with the subject:

Gender agreement of past participles

Nombre masculin féminin
singulier allé allée
pluriels allés allées

 

Quels verbes prennent être?

Below is a list of common verbs that take être in the passé composé. You can memorize them by thinking of the actions taking place inside and outside of the house (as per the picture above). Alternatively, there is a well-known mnemonic device for remembering which verbs are conjugated with être. If you can remember “Dr. and Mrs. Vandertramp”, you’re halfway there: each letter in this phrase corresponds to the first letter of a verb that requires être.

In the following table, the letters in bold spell out the phrase “Dr. & Mrs. Vandertramp” from top to bottom:

 

Français

Anglais

Exemple (féminin + singulier)

Devenir to become elle est devenue
Revenir to return elle est revenue
Monter to go up, mount elle est montée
Retourner to go back, return, send back elle est retournée
Sortir to leave, go out elle est sortie
Venir to come elle est venue
Aller to go elle est allée
Naître to be born elle est née
Descendre to descend, go down elle est descendue
Entrer to enter elle est entrée
Rester to stay, remain elle est restée
Tomber to fall elle est tombée
Rentrer to go back, come back elle est rentrée
Arriver to arrive, get somewhere elle est arrivée
Mourir to die elle est morte
Partir to leave (for) elle est partie

A few important notes on these so-called House (or Dr & Mrs Vandertramp) verbs:

Passer (to pass by):

In French, the verb passer is at least two different words! How? Well, for the same reason that the words “mean” (cruel), “mean” (to signify), “mean” (to intend), “mean” (excellent) and “mean” (middle point) are 5 different words in English. It all depends on the context.

So, when the passé composé of the verb passer takes être it means “to pass by”. It takes the avoir auxiliary, however, when it means “to spend time”. But it can have even more meanings depending on the context beyond the verb. For more information on this, you can read: Passer used with avoir vs. être in le passé composé.

Watch this video: The verb passer in French: avoir vs. être.

Sortir (to go out):

When the verb sortir takes être, it means “to go out”, or “to leave”. When it takes avoir it means “to take someone or something out”: Elle est sortie de la maison (She left the house) vs. Elle a sorti la poubelle (she took out the trash).

Naître & mourir (to be born and to die)

Notice that the past participles for naître () and mourir (mort) are irregular.

Ressources supplémentaires

Watch these videos for additional explanations and examples of the passé composé with être:

Review the rules for past participle agreement with these video tutorials :

Watch the video Dr. and Mrs. Vandertramp Story to review the passé composé with être.

 

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Grammaire 1 Passé composé avec être Copyright © by cgloor is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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