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réduise

Réduise is the present subjunctive form of the French verb réduire, meaning to reduce or to lessen. As a grammatical form, it does not stand alone as a lexical item but rather appears in dependent clauses to express necessity, doubt, desire, possibility, or emotion. In standard French, the subjunctive mood is used after certain verbs and expressions (and after conjunctions) to indicate subjectivity rather than factual certainty.

Usage and context

Réduise appears in clauses introduced by expressions such as il faut que, bien que, pour que, à

Conjugation

The present subjunctive forms of réduire include: que je réduise, que tu réduises, qu’il/elle réduise, que nous

Related notes

Réduire is an irregular -re verb; its past participle is réduit. The subjunctive forms share a common

See also: réduire, French subjunctive, French grammar.

condition
que,
or
afin
qu’elle/he
reduzise,
where
the
action
is
viewed
as
potential
or
desired
rather
than
asserted.
For
example:
Il
faut
que
je
réduise
mes
dépenses
(I
must
reduce
my
expenses).
Bien
que
cela
réduise
les
coûts,
cela
pourrait
affecter
la
qualité
(Although
this
reduces
costs,
it
could
affect
quality).
In
formal
or
literary
writing,
the
subjunctive
mood
is
more
common,
though
it
is
increasingly
rare
in
everyday
speech.
réduisions,
que
vous
réduisiez,
qu’ils/elles
réduisent.
The
form
réduise
corresponds
to
first
and
third
person
singular
in
this
mood.
stem
(réduis-)
with
the
other
person
forms
and
require
the
typical
endings
of
the
present
subjunctive
in
French.
The
term
réduise
is
thus
a
conjugated
form
of
a
common
verb
rather
than
a
standalone
word
with
a
separate
meaning.