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Master French Grammar: A Complete Beginner’s Guide

French Grammar Guide · LearnFrenchEnLigne

Master French Grammar: A Complete Beginner’s Guide

From verb conjugations to gender agreements — every rule you need to speak French with confidence.

✦ 12 min read ✦ Levels A1 – B2 ✦ Updated 2025

French grammar can feel overwhelming at first — but once you understand its core patterns, everything clicks. This guide breaks down the essential building blocks so you can read, write, and speak French with growing confidence.

A1 Beginner

Noun Gender: Le, La & Les

Every French noun is either masculine or feminine — and there’s no perfect shortcut. However, certain endings are reliable clues.

-tion, -sionUsually feminine · la nation
-eur, -mentUsually masculine · le moment
-ette, -ièreUsually feminine · la boulangère
-eau, -ageUsually masculine · le voyage
-ité, -udeUsually feminine · la liberté
-isme, -isteUsually masculine · le tourisme
💡 Pro tip: Always learn a noun with its article. Don’t memorize maison — memorize la maison. This effortlessly builds gender memory over time.
Le garçon mange une pomme.
The boy eats an apple.
La fille lit un livre intéressant.
The girl reads an interesting book.

A1 Beginner

Être — To Be

Être is the most fundamental French verb. It forms compound tenses and describes identity, origin, and state. Memorise it first.

être — to be Présent de l’indicatif
jesuis
tues
il / elleest
noussommes
vousêtes
ils / ellessont
Je suis étudiant. Tu es français ?
I am a student. Are you French?
Nous sommes fatigués après le voyage.
We are tired after the journey.

A1 Beginner

Avoir — To Have

Avoir expresses possession and is the auxiliary for most compound tenses (like the passé composé). It’s just as critical as être.

avoir — to have Présent de l’indicatif
j’ai
tuas
il / ellea
nousavons
vousavez
ils / ellesont
J’ai deux chats et un chien.
I have two cats and a dog.
⚠️ In French, avoir is used for age: J’ai vingt ans (I am twenty years old — literally “I have twenty years”). Don’t use être for age!

A1 Beginner

Regular –ER Verbs

Over 90% of French verbs end in -ER and follow one predictable pattern. Mastering this unlocks hundreds of verbs instantly.

parler — to speak Présent de l’indicatif
jeparle
tuparles
il / elleparle
nousparlons
vousparlez
ils / ellesparlent

Apply the same endings to: aimer (to love), manger (to eat), chanter (to sing), écouter (to listen), regarder (to watch).

Elle parle français couramment.
She speaks French fluently.
Nous mangeons ensemble ce soir.
We are eating together this evening.

A2 Elementary

Adjective Agreement

French adjectives agree in gender and number with the noun they describe. This means the same adjective can have up to four forms.

grandmasc. singular
grandefem. singular (+e)
grandsmasc. plural (+s)
grandesfem. plural (+es)
Un homme grand. Une femme grande.
A tall man. A tall woman.
Des garçons grands. Des filles grandes.
Tall boys. Tall girls.
📍 Most adjectives come after the noun in French. But a handful — beau, grand, bon, joli, jeune, vieux, gros, nouveau (BAGS adjectives) — come before the noun.

B1 Intermediate

The Passé Composé

The passé composé is the most common past tense in spoken French. It describes completed actions. Formed with avoir or être + past participle.

parler — to speak Passé composé
j’ai parlé
tuas parlé
il / ellea parlé
nousavons parlé
vousavez parlé
ils / ellesont parlé
aller — to go (uses être) Passé composé
jesuis allé(e)
tues allé(e)
il / elleest allé / allée
noussommes allé(e)s
vousêtes allé(e)(s)
ils / ellessont allés / allées
🏠 Remember DR & MRS VANDERTRAMP for verbs that use être: Devenir, Revenir, Monter, Rester, Sortir, Venir, Aller, Naître, Descendre, Entrer, Retourner, Tomber, Rentrer, Arriver, Mourir, Partir — plus all reflexive verbs.
Hier, j’ai mangé une bonne pizza.
Yesterday, I ate a good pizza.
Elle est arrivée à Paris ce matin.
She arrived in Paris this morning.

B2 Upper Intermediate

The Subjonctif

The subjonctif expresses doubt, emotion, necessity, and subjectivity. It’s triggered by specific conjunctions and expressions.

il faut queit is necessary that
bien quealthough
pour queso that
je veux queI want (sb) to
parler — to speak Subjonctif présent
que jeparle
que tuparles
qu’il / elleparle
que nousparlions
que vousparliez
qu’ils / ellesparlent
Il faut que tu finisses tes devoirs.
You must finish your homework.
Je suis contente qu’il soit là.
I’m glad that he is here.

Made with ❤️ for French learners everywhere · © 2025 LearnFrenchEnLigne

Grammar · Vocabulary · Exercises · Listening · Speaking

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