Monday, December 30, 2019
Learn the French Conjugations for Rougir (to Blush)
  A very fun verb, the Frenchà  rougirà  means to blush or to turn red. Its used most often when youre describing someones embarrassment and in order to say he blushed or she is blushing, you will need a conjugation of the verb. That is the subject of this French lesson.          The Basic Conjugations ofà  Rougir      Rougir is a regular -ir verb and it follows a very common conjugation pattern used in the French language. This category includes many verbs, such as reunir (to reunite) and remplirà  (to fill). If you have studied a few of these, you can apply the endings you already know to this conjugation.         The indicative mood is the best place to begin. Here you will find the basic present, future, and imperfect past tenses which you will use most often in conversation. As with all French conjugations, you need to memorize a new form of the verb for every subject pronoun within each tense.         Beginning with the verb stem (roug-), use the chart to study which ending is required for each circumstance. As an example, I am blushing isà  je rougisà  and we turned red isà  nous rougissions.                           Present  Future  Imperfect          je  rougis  rougirai  rougissais      tu  rougis  rougiras  rougissais      il  rougit  rougira  rougissait      nous  rougissons  rougirons  rougissions      vous  rougissez  rougirez  rougissiez      ils  rougissent  rougiront  rougissaient                The Present Participle ofà  Rougir      Conjugating a regular -ir verb into its present participle is as simple as adding -issant to the stem. For rougir, that produces the word rougissant.          Rougirà  in the Compound Past Tense      In French, you may use either the imperfect or theà  passà © composà ©Ã  to express the past tense blushed. To form the latter, begin with the appropriate present tense conjugate of the auxiliary verbà  avoir,à  then add theà  past participleà  rougi. This results in phrases such asà  jai rougià  (I blushed) andà  nous avons rougià  (we blushed).          More Simple Conjugations ofà  Rougir      At times, you may not know if someone is really going to blush or not and thats when the subjunctiveà  is used. In another circumstance, someone may not blush unless something else happens (they receive a compliment, for instance). Thats when you can useà  the conditional.         Found almost exclusively in French literature, you may not needà  the passà © simpleà  andà  the imperfect subjunctiveà  often. However, they are good to know.                             Subjunctive  Conditional  Pass simple  Imperfect subjunctive          je  rougisse  rougirais  rougis  rougisse      tu  rougisses  rougirais  rougis  rougisses      il  rougisse  rougirait  rougit  rougt      nous  rougissions  rougirions  rougmes  rougissions      vous  rougissiez  rougiriez  rougtes  rougissiez      ils  rougissent  rougiraient  rougirent  rougissent               The French imperativeà  may not be as useful for a verb likeà  rougirà  as it is for other actions, but you may find times to use it. Just keep in mind that this is the one instance when its okay to drop the subject pronoun. That meansà  tu rougisà  becomesà  rougis.                       Imperative          (tu)  rougis      (nous)  rougissons      (vous)  rougissez    
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