Saturday, August 22, 2020

All About the French Regular Verb Passer (to Pass)

About the French Regular Verb 'Passer' ('to Pass') Passer (to pass) is an exceptionally normal and valuable ordinary - er action word, by a long shot the biggest gathering of action words in the French language. It might be utilized as a transitive action word that takes an immediate item or an intransitive action word, and in doing as such, itsâ compound tensesâ are conjugated with eitherâ avoirâ orâ ã ªtre. Intransitive Passerâ à ªtre With no immediate item, passer intends to pass and requires à ªtre in the compound tenses: Le train va passer dans cinq minutes.  The train is going to pass/go past in five minutes.Nous sommes passã ©s devant la porte midi.  We passed by the entryway around early afternoon At the point when followed by an infinitive, passer intends to go/come to accomplish something: Je vais passer te voir demain.  Ill drop (by to) see you tomorrow.Pouvez-vous passer acheter du painâ ?  Can you go get some bread? Transitive Passer Avoir At the point when passer is transitive and has an immediate article, it intends to go, to cross, to experience, and it requires avoir as the assistant verbâ in the compound tenses. On doit passer la riviã ¨re avant le coucher du soleil.â We have to cross the waterway before sunset.Il a dã ©j passã © la porte.  He has just experienced the entryway. Passer is likewise utilized transitively with a timeframe to intend to spend: Nous allons passer deux semaines en France.  Were going to go through about fourteen days in FranceJai passã © trois mois sur ce livre.   I went through 3 months on that book Transitive versus Intransitive While the implications are almost the equivalent, the thing that matters is in the article (the thing following the action word). On the off chance that there is no article, or if a relational word isolates the action word and item, the action word is intransitive, as in Je suis passã © devant la porte. In the event that theres no relational word, as in Jai passã © la porte, its transitive. Se Passer The pronominal se passer frequently intends to occur, to occur, or, regarding time, to pass by. Mission ce qui se passeâ ?  Whats going on?Tout sest bien passã ©.  Everything went smoothly.Deux jours se sont passã ©s.  Two days passed by. Articulations With Passer Withâ idiomatic expressionsâ using the French verbâ passer, you can margarine somebody up,â handcuff somebody, kick the can, and that's only the tip of the iceberg. passer  clothingâ â to slip on/intopasser  infinitiveâ â to go do somethingpasser la douane  to experience customspasser la radio/tã ©lã ©  to be on the radio/TVpasser lheure dã ©t㠩â â to turn the timekeepers foward, start light sparing timepasser lheure dhiverâ â to turn the tickers back, end sunlight sparing timepasser pas lents  to pass slowlypasser de bons minutes  to have a decent timepasser de bouche en bouche  to be reputed aboutpasser des artificial billets  to pass manufactured moneypasser devant Monsieur le maire  to get marriedpasser du coq lã ¢neâ â to change the subject, make a non sequiturpasser en courant  to run pastpasser en revue  to list; to go over in ones psyche, go throughâ (figurative)â passer (en)  ordinal numberâ â to put in ___ gearpasser lã ¢ge de  to be too old forpasser larme gaucheâ (familiar)â â to kick the bucketpasser la journã ©e/soirã ©e  to go through the day/eveningpasser la principle dans le dos quelquun  to margarine somebody uppasser la tã ªte la porte  to jab ones head around the entryway passer le top  to move beyond the most exceedingly terrible, turn the corner, get over the hurdlepasser le top des 40 ans  to turn 40passer le poteau  to cross the completion linepasser les bornes  to go too farpasser les menottes quelquun  to bind someonepasser standard  to experience (an encounter or intermediary)passer standard de dures à ©preuves  to experience some unpleasant timespasser standard toutes les couleurs de larc-en-ciel  to redden to the underlying foundations of ones hair, to turn pale (from fear)passer standard luniversitã ©  to experience collegepasser pour  to take for, be taken forpasser quelque picked quelquun  to pass/hand something to someonepasser quelque picked aux/standard benefits et pertes  to discount something (as a loss)passer quelque picked en fraude  to carry somethingpasser quelque picked sous quiet  to disregard something in silencepasser quelquun tabac  to beat somebody uppasser quelquun standard les armes  to sh oot somebody by terminating squadpasser sa colã ¨re sur quelquun  to take out ones outrage on somebody passer sa mauvaise humeur sur quelquun  to take out ones awful state of mind on someonepasser sa compete faire  to consume ones time on earth doing Conjugations You can see all the tensesâ of passer, both basic and compound,â conjugated somewhere else. For the present, underneath is the current state to show that passer cuts precisely to ordinary - er conjugation endings.â Current state: je passetuâ passesil passenousâ passonsvousâ passezilsâ passent

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