Why does this lesson even talk about irregular verbs, since the title is "regular verbs"?

RobertC1Kwiziq community member

Why does this lesson even talk about irregular verbs, since the title is "regular verbs"?

This is the first lesson I've run across that is confusing, so that's pretty darn good!  There are no examples of third person plural except the irregular one, so a novice has no idea what the third person plural rule is for regular verbs.  Please update so make it clear that aient is indeed the ending for regular as well as irregular verbs (maybe by using a regular verb as the example since this page is supposed to be about regular verbs).  Thanks.

Asked 3 years ago
AurélieKwiziq team memberCorrect answer

Bonjour Robert !

Thank you very much for pointing that lesson to us. Indeed, it needed some love and care, to make it clearer :) Thanks to you, it's now done!
I hope it's helpful :)

Merci encore et bonne journée !

Why does this lesson even talk about irregular verbs, since the title is "regular verbs"?

This is the first lesson I've run across that is confusing, so that's pretty darn good!  There are no examples of third person plural except the irregular one, so a novice has no idea what the third person plural rule is for regular verbs.  Please update so make it clear that aient is indeed the ending for regular as well as irregular verbs (maybe by using a regular verb as the example since this page is supposed to be about regular verbs).  Thanks.

Sign in to submit your answer

Don't have an account yet? Join today

Ask a question

Find your French level for FREE

Test your French to the CEFR standard

Find your French level
Getting that for you now...