I know there are lots of exceptions in French! Is there one hiding behind the breaking of the symmetry of taking off two letters and adding one when forming participles (-er > -é, -ir > -i, but -dre > -du, rather than the simpler -re > -u) ?
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Andrew T.Kwiziq community member
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This question relates to:French lesson "Conjugate regular -er, -ir, -dre verbs (+ avoir) in the pluperfect tense in French (Le Plus-que-Parfait)"
Asked 2 years ago
Bonjour Andrew,
I do apologise for the delay in replying to your query.
We decided to display the verb ending -dre, and not to use -re, as in most cases, the rule of replacing the verb ending -re with -u would not work. This includes a lot of common verbs ending in -re (faire, disparaître, boire etc.).
Faire -> faiu fait
boire -> boiu bu
disparaître -> disparaitu disparu
I hope this is helpful.
Bonne journée !
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