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conjugaison

Conjugaison refers to the set of inflectional changes through which verbs express grammatical categories such as person and number, tense, mood, and voice. It is a central component of verbal morphology in many languages, enabling agreement with subjects and encoding the speaker’s stance toward the event. While the specifics differ, the general aim is to derive distinct verb forms from a common lemma.

In French, the term conjugaison denotes the systematic variation of verb forms. French verbs are traditionally

French conjugation combines endings, stem changes, and orthographic adjustments. Regular conjugation follows predictable endings, while irregular

Example present indicative forms: parler: je parle, tu parles, il parle, nous parlons, vous parlez, ils parlent.

categorized
into
three
conjugations
by
infinitive
endings:
-er,
-ir,
-re,
though
many
irregular
verbs
navigate
their
own
patterns.
Regular
and
irregular
forms
cover
present,
past,
and
future
tenses,
as
well
as
compound
tenses
that
use
auxiliary
verbs
such
as
être
or
avoir.
The
language
also
distinguishes
moods—indicative,
subjunctive,
imperative,
and
conditional—and
uses
different
forms
to
express
voice,
chiefly
active
and,
less
commonly,
passive
constructions.
verbs
show
stem
changes
and
irregular
endings.
Spelling
adjustments
preserve
pronunciation
in
certain
forms
(for
example,
-ger
verbs
yield
nous
mangeons).
Some
verbs
exhibit
stem
vowel
changes
or
irregular
themes
(aller,
venir,
pouvoir).
Learners
rely
on
conjugation
tables
and
rules;
linguists
analyze
paradigms
to
study
verb
systems,
and
computational
tools
parse
or
generate
verb
forms
for
language
processing
tasks.
Avoir:
j’ai,
tu
as,
il
a,
nous
avons,
vous
avez,
ils
ont.
Être:
suis,
es,
est,
sommes,
êtes,
sont.
Conjugaison
thus
underpins
syntax,
language
learning,
and
natural
language
processing
in
French
and
related
languages.