Bonjour à tous, hello everyone — and welcome back to the French Made Easy podcast!
This is episode number 181 — numéro cent quatre-vingt-un.
Today, we’re talking conjugation! and most specifically, about French verb tenses 🕒. I'll explain the main ones you need to know as a beginner — when to use them and why they're important. Of course, I'll also share plenty of examples!
Before we start, as usual, make sure you’ve got your lesson cheat sheet in front of you so you can follow along and see how everything is written. And after this episode, head to the French Made Easy Exercise Library to practise. It’s free — all the links are in the episode notes!
Let’s get started! 🎧
What’s a tense?
A verb tense tells us when something happens — now, before, or later.
In French, we use different tenses to talk about the present, the past, and the future.
You don’t need to master all of these tenses at once — but knowing what they are will help you follow along more easily when you hear or read French, and in your future French studies.
Let’s go through the most important ones for beginners:
1. Le Présent – The Present Tense
We use le présent to talk about what's happening right now, what happens regularly, or things that are general facts. This is the tense that you’ll use the most as a beginner.
Examples:
2. Le Passé Composé – The Passé Composé
We use le passé composé to talk about completed actions in the past. It's formed with two parts: a helping verb (avoir or être) + a past participle (like mangé, allé, etc.).
Examples:
3. L’Imparfait – The Imperfect Tense
L’imparfait is another past tense. Unlike the passé composé, which describes completed actions, l'imparfait describes ongoing actions, repeated habits, or states in the past.
Examples:
If you’re not 100% confident when to use passé composé vs imparfait, don’t panic — I’ve got a full episode on that coming soon!
4. Le Futur Proche – The Near Future
We use le futur proche to talk about things happening very soon. It's very common in everyday speaking and very easy to use: just take the verb aller + another verb in the infinitive (the base form of the verb, like manger, regarder, faire, apprendre, etc.).
Examples:
5. Le Futur Simple – The Simple Future
We use le futur simple to talk about actions that will happen later. It’s great for speaking about plans, predictions, or scheduled actions.
Examples:
6. Le Conditionnel Présent – The Present Conditional
We use le conditionnel présent to talk about what would happen in certain situations, or to be polite. It’s very common for making polite requests or sharing wishes.
Examples:
7. Le Subjonctif – The Subjunctive Mood
Le subjonctif is not a tense (it doesn't tell you when), but a mood. It shows how the speaker feels about something—usually after phrases expressing wishes, doubts, emotions, or uncertainty.
Examples:
🔁 Quick Recap
Let’s quickly go over everything we've learned today:
That's it for today’s episode! Remember, you don’t need to memorize everything right away—one step at a time!
Don’t forget your cheat sheet, and head to the French Made Easy Exercise Library to practise.
Thanks for listening — I’ll chat with you next week!
À bientôt. 🤍