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Movement and Agreement in the Past
Passé Composé with être (DR MRS VANDERTRAMP)
Movement and reflexive verbs use `être` in the past tense and require gender and number agreement with the subject.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Most French verbs use `avoir`, but a specific movement group uses `être`.
- The acronym `DR MRS VANDERTRAMP` helps you memorize these 17 specific verbs.
- All reflexive verbs (like `se laver`) must use `être` in the past.
- Always match the past participle's ending with the subject's gender and number.
Quick Reference
| Infinitif | Participe Passé | English | Example (Feminine) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aller | allé | To go | Elle est allée au parc. |
| Venir | venu | To come | Elle est venue nous voir. |
| Arriver | arrivé | To arrive | Elle est arrivée tôt. |
| Partir | parti | To leave | Elle est partie à midi. |
| Entrer | entré | To enter | Elle est entrée dans la salle. |
| Rester | resté | To stay | Elle est restée à l'hôtel. |
| Naître | né | To be born | Elle est née en France. |
| Mourir | mort | To die | Elle est morte en 1990. |
मुख्य उदाहरण
3 / 9Je suis allé au cinéma hier soir.
I went to the cinema last night.
Elle est arrivée en retard à la réunion.
She arrived late to the meeting.
Ils sont partis en vacances ce matin.
They left on vacation this morning.
The Silent Agreement
In speech, you usually won't hear the difference between 'allé' and 'allée'. It's a writing rule first, so don't panic during a conversation!
The Movement Trap
Not all motion uses 'être'. Verbs like 'courir' (run) or 'marcher' (walk) use 'avoir'. Only the 17 specific verbs in the House of Être use 'être'.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Most French verbs use `avoir`, but a specific movement group uses `être`.
- The acronym `DR MRS VANDERTRAMP` helps you memorize these 17 specific verbs.
- All reflexive verbs (like `se laver`) must use `être` in the past.
- Always match the past participle's ending with the subject's gender and number.
Overview
Most French verbs are team players. They use avoir to talk about the past. But then there is the "être" squad. This group is small but very common. If you want to say you went somewhere, arrived late, or stayed home, you need être. Think of these as verbs of movement or life changes. Most people call them the "House of Être" verbs. Others use the famous acronym DR MRS VANDERTRAMP. It sounds like a character from a spy movie. It is actually your best friend for mastering the French past tense. Once you learn these 17 verbs, you have unlocked a huge part of daily conversation. It is like learning the secret handshake for French speakers. Yes, even native speakers mess this up sometimes when they are tired. But you are going to be a pro. Let’s dive into how this works and why it matters for your A2 level.
How This Grammar Works
In English, we say "I have gone" or "She has arrived." In French, you literally say "I am gone" or "She is arrived." It sounds a bit like old-fashioned English poetry. This happens because these verbs describe a change in state or location. You aren't doing something to an object. You are the one moving or changing. The big difference here is the "agreement." Since we use être, the past participle acts a bit like an adjective. It has to match the person who did the action. If a woman is speaking, she adds an e. If a group is speaking, they add an s. Think of it like a grammar traffic light. Green means go, but red means stop and check the gender and number of your subject. It becomes second nature after a while. You will start to hear the extra e or s in your head even if you don't always say it aloud.
Formation Pattern
- 1Start with your subject. This is the person or thing doing the action (e.g.,
Je,Tu,Elle). - 2Conjugate
êtrein the present tense. This matches your subject. (e.g.,Je suis,Tu es,Il est). - 3Add the past participle. This is the past version of your main verb (e.g.,
allé,venu). - 4Apply the agreement rule. This is the most important step for
êtreverbs. - 5For a feminine subject, add an
-eto the end:Elle est allée. - 6For a masculine plural subject, add an
-s:Ils sont allés. - 7For a feminine plural subject, add
-es:Elles sont allées. - 8For a masculine singular subject, keep it simple:
Il est allé.
When To Use It
You use être for two main categories. First, the 17 "motion" verbs in the DR MRS VANDERTRAMP list. These include aller (to go), venir (to come), partir (to leave), and arriver (to arrive). Second, you use it for all reflexive verbs. These are the ones that start with se like se laver or se réveiller. If you are talking about your morning routine in the past, you are using être. Imagine you are at a job interview. You want to say you arrived on time. You would say, Je suis arrivé à l'heure. If you are a woman, you'd write arrivée. It shows you know the rules. It also works for travel. Nous sommes allés au Japon (We went to Japan). It covers the big moments of life too: being born (naître) and dying (mourir).
When Not To Use It
Do not use être for just any movement. Verbs like courir (to run), sauter (to jump), or danser (to dance) actually use avoir. Why? Because they focus on the physical activity, not the change of location. This is a common trap. Also, watch out for the "Switch Verbs." Some verbs like passer, monter, and descendre can use either avoir or être. If you just say "I went up," use être: Je suis monté. But if you say "I carried the bags up," you use avoir: J'ai monté les sacs. If there is a direct object (like bags), avoir takes over the driver's seat. It's like a grammar plot twist. Most of the time, though, stick to your DR MRS VANDERTRAMP list and you will be fine.
Common Mistakes
Forgetting the agreement is the #1 mistake. It is easy to write Elle est allé because it sounds the same as allée. But in writing, that missing e stands out like a sore thumb. Another mistake is using avoir because English does. J'ai allé is a classic learner error. It sounds like saying "I has went" in English. Just remember that aller is the VIP of the être club. Also, watch out for on. In modern French, on usually means "we." Even though the verb stays singular (On est allé), many people add an s to the participle (allés) to show it represents a group. This is a bit of a gray area, but adding the s is very common in informal writing. Don't stress too much, though. Even French kids spend years getting this right.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Compare Passé Composé with être to the regular version with avoir. With avoir, the participle usually doesn't change. Elle a mangé stays the same whether it's him, her, or them. But with être, it’s all about the subject. Think of avoir as a rigid box and être as a mirror. être reflects the person doing the action. Also, compare it to the present tense. Je vais (I go) vs Je suis allé (I went). The jump from one word to three (Subject + Auxiliary + Participle) is the biggest hurdle. Once you get the rhythm of Suis + Participle, you’ll feel much more fluent. It’s like switching from a bike to a car. It takes more coordination, but you get further.
Quick FAQ
Q. Does DR MRS VANDERTRAMP cover everything?
A. It covers the main non-reflexive verbs. Don't forget reflexive verbs too!
Q. Is the agreement always audible?
A. Rarely. Allé and allée sound identical. It matters most for writing.
Q. Can I use avoir with aller if I'm in a hurry?
A. No! It will sound very wrong to a French person. Stick to être.
Q. Why is devenir on the list?
A. It means "to become." That is the ultimate change of state!
Reference Table
| Infinitif | Participe Passé | English | Example (Feminine) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aller | allé | To go | Elle est allée au parc. |
| Venir | venu | To come | Elle est venue nous voir. |
| Arriver | arrivé | To arrive | Elle est arrivée tôt. |
| Partir | parti | To leave | Elle est partie à midi. |
| Entrer | entré | To enter | Elle est entrée dans la salle. |
| Rester | resté | To stay | Elle est restée à l'hôtel. |
| Naître | né | To be born | Elle est née en France. |
| Mourir | mort | To die | Elle est morte en 1990. |
The Silent Agreement
In speech, you usually won't hear the difference between 'allé' and 'allée'. It's a writing rule first, so don't panic during a conversation!
The Movement Trap
Not all motion uses 'être'. Verbs like 'courir' (run) or 'marcher' (walk) use 'avoir'. Only the 17 specific verbs in the House of Être use 'être'.
Reflexive Reflex
If the verb starts with 'se' in the dictionary (se laver, se lever), it ALWAYS uses 'être' in the past. No exceptions!
The 'On' Debate
When using 'on' to mean 'we', it's very common for French people to add an 's' to the participle in texts and emails, even if textbooks say otherwise.
उदाहरण
9Je suis allé au cinéma hier soir.
Focus: suis allé
I went to the cinema last night.
A masculine speaker uses the standard participle.
Elle est arrivée en retard à la réunion.
Focus: arrivée
She arrived late to the meeting.
We add an 'e' because the subject is 'elle'.
Ils sont partis en vacances ce matin.
Focus: partis
They left on vacation this morning.
We add an 's' because 'ils' is masculine plural.
Nous nous sommes couchés très tard.
Focus: sommes couchés
We went to bed very late.
All reflexive verbs use 'être' in the past.
Madame, êtes-vous descendue par l'escalier ?
Focus: êtes-vous descendue
Madam, did you come down by the stairs?
Even with 'vous', we use feminine singular agreement for one woman.
✗ J'ai tombé → ✓ Je suis tombé.
Focus: suis tombé
I fell.
Falling is a 'Vandertramp' motion, so use 'être'.
✗ Elles sont venu → ✓ Elles sont venues.
Focus: venues
They (f) came.
Don't forget the 'es' for feminine plural subjects!
Le dinosaure est mort il y a longtemps.
Focus: est mort
The dinosaur died a long time ago.
Mourir is one of the 17 être verbs.
J'ai passé un examen ce matin.
Focus: J'ai passé
I took an exam this morning.
Because there is a direct object (examen), we use 'avoir' instead of 'être'.
खुद को परखो
Choose the correct form of the verb 'aller' for a female subject.
Hier, Marie ___ au restaurant.
Marie is feminine singular, so we use 'être' and add an 'e' to the participle.
Which auxiliary verb is needed for the reflexive verb 'se lever'?
Ils ___ levés à huit heures.
Reflexive verbs in the past tense require the reflexive pronoun (se) and the auxiliary 'être' (sont).
Complete the sentence for a group of men leaving.
Mes frères ___ hier soir.
'Mes frères' is masculine plural, so we use 'être' and add an 's' to the participle 'parti'.
🎉 स्कोर: /3
विज़ुअल लर्निंग टूल्स
Avoir vs. Être in Passé Composé
Choosing the Right Auxiliary
Is it a reflexive verb (se...)?
Is it in DR MRS VANDERTRAMP?
Is there a direct object?
Result:
The 4 Agreement Types
Masc. Sing.
- • Il est allé
- • No ending
Fem. Sing.
- • Elle est allée
- • Add -e
Masc. Plur.
- • Ils sont allés
- • Add -s
Fem. Plur.
- • Elles sont allées
- • Add -es
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले सवाल
22 सवालIt stands for Devenir, Revenir, Mourir, Rester, Sortir, Venir, Arriver, Naître, Descendre, Entrer, Rentrer, Tomber, Rester, Aller, Monter, Partir. It's a mnemonic to remember the 17 verbs that use être.
Generally, être verbs describe a change of place or a change of state (like being born or dying). Most other verbs describe a specific action done to something else.
Usually, no. With avoir, the past participle stays the same unless there is a direct object pronoun before the verb, which is a more advanced rule.
You say Je suis allée. You add the extra e in writing to show you are feminine, but it sounds exactly like the masculine version.
No, if a verb has a direct object, it almost always switches to avoir. For example, Je suis monté (I went up) vs J'ai monté la valise (I carried the suitcase up).
Yes, along with its cousins like revenir and devenir. They all follow the motion rule.
It's a tricky one! Je suis passé chez toi (I stopped by your place) uses être, but J'ai passé un examen (I took an exam) uses avoir.
Nope! Even though jumping is a movement, sauter uses avoir. Think of it as an activity rather than a change of location.
In French, the masculine plural wins. You would say Nous sommes allés, using the masculine plural ending -s.
Just look for the se or s' before the verb. Se doucher, se réveiller, and se promener all require être in the past.
Common mistake! Rester actually means 'to stay.' It's an être verb because you are 'staying' in a state or place.
It's né. So, 'I was born' is Je suis né (or née if you're female).
You say Elles sont arrivées. Don't forget the -es ending for feminine plural!
They both mean to leave, but partir uses être and quitter uses avoir. Quitter always needs an object, like J'ai quitté la ville.
Because it represents the ultimate change of state. You go from being one thing to being another.
Your friends will still understand you, but it might look a bit lazy. It's like forgetting a capital letter in English.
No, habiter (to live/dwell) uses avoir. J'ai habité à Paris is the correct form.
Yes! Falling is a change of position, so Je suis tombé is the way to go.
Most students find the 'switch verbs' like monter and descendre the hardest because they have to check for a direct object.
No, this specific rule is only for the Passé Composé. The future tense uses a completely different structure.
Absolutely. They often make mistakes with the agreement until they are about 8 or 9 years old.
Yes! Since aller and partir are so common, getting these right will make your French sound much more natural immediately.
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