PrepMyFrench
The ultimate tool for your verbs

Conjugator

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Tapez n'importe quel verbe français pour voir toutes ses conjugaisons.

Grammaire française

Every tense, every mood — at a glance.

Type any French verb to get the full conjugation across présent, passé composé, imparfait, futur simple, conditionnel, subjonctif, impératif, and more. Built for TEF Canada and TCF Canada candidates who need to fix verb errors before they lose points on the real exam.

Start with the “Big Four”

être to be

States of being, professions, nationalities, descriptions. Also the auxiliary for several compound tenses.

Jesuis
Tues
Il / Elle / Onest
Noussommes
Vousêtes
Ils / Ellessont
Je suis candidat pour le TCF Canada.
I am a candidate for the TCF Canada.

avoir to have

Possession, age, hunger/thirst/fear, and the most common auxiliary verb for the passé composé.

Jeai
Tuas
Il / Elle / Ona
Nousavons
Vousavez
Ils / Ellesont
J'ai trente ans.
I am thirty years old. (literally: I have thirty years.)

aller to go

Physical movement and the building block of the futur proche (aller + infinitive) — the easiest way to talk about the future.

Jevais
Tuvas
Il / Elle / Onva
Nousallons
Vousallez
Ils / Ellesvont
Je vais déménager au Canada l'année prochaine.
I am going to move to Canada next year.

faire to do / to make

Activities, weather, idiomatic expressions (faire attention, faire les courses, faire de l'exercice).

Jefais
Tufais
Il / Elle / Onfait
Nousfaisons
Vousfaites
Ils / Ellesfont
Il fait beau aujourd'hui.
The weather is nice today.

Conjugation questions

Why does French verb conjugation matter so much for TEF / TCF Canada?+

Both exams grade you on grammatical accuracy across all four sections. The Section A speaking task, the Section B writing task, and the reading comprehension all reward correct verb forms. Wrong tense or wrong subject-verb agreement is one of the fastest ways to lose points, and irregular verbs (être, avoir, aller, faire, prendre, voir, vouloir, pouvoir) appear in nearly every sentence you produce.

Which French verbs should I learn first?+

Start with the "Big Four": être, avoir, aller, and faire. They are essential on their own and also act as auxiliaries or building blocks for other tenses (passé composé, futur proche, idiomatic expressions). Once those are automatic, move to the next tier: prendre, voir, savoir, pouvoir, vouloir, devoir, dire, mettre.

What is the difference between regular and irregular French verbs?+

Regular verbs follow predictable conjugation patterns based on their ending: -er verbs (the largest group), -ir verbs, and -re verbs. Irregular verbs deviate from those patterns and have to be memorised individually. Most of the highest-frequency French verbs are irregular, which is why learning them up front pays off more than learning new vocabulary.

How is the conjugator different from a textbook table?+

Type any French verb (regular or irregular) and get every form in seconds — present, passé composé, imparfait, futur simple, conditionnel, subjonctif, impératif, and more. The conjugator highlights pronunciation traps and links each tense back to a dedicated grammar guide where you can practise exercises.

Where can I practise the conjugations?+

Each tense has its own page under /grammar/tenses with conjugation rules and free interactive exercises. The grammar/verbs section covers verb groups (irregular, pronominal, auxiliary), and the speaking + writing practice tools surface conjugation errors directly in your AI-graded feedback.