Être, meanwhile, thought Parler was boring. “Rules are for furniture,” he’d scoff. “I am je suis today, but tomorrow? Who knows? Maybe je serai (future tense of être)!”
The English sentence grew more desperate. “What about: I went to the store ?” verbos regulares e irregulares en frances
The two neighbors rarely spoke. Monsieur Parler thought Être was chaotic and unreliable. “Why can’t you just follow the pattern?” he would mutter, dusting his clean, regular and -re friends like Finir and Vendre . Être, meanwhile, thought Parler was boring
“Never,” said Parler.
Parler tried again. “ Je all- ” He stopped. Aller wasn’t his friend. Aller was irregular. He couldn’t conjugate it. Who knows
Monsieur Parler stepped forward immediately. “Easy! Je parl- ” he began. But he froze. The action was in the past. He knew his past tense required an auxiliary verb, but he couldn't do it alone.