(The Complete Beginner French Course Part 1)
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Welcome & Introduction
Welcome to Your French Learning
Journey! -
Your Offline Toolkit
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How To Learn A New Language
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Instructions for the Speaking Practice Exercises Copy
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Instructions on Essay Exercises Copy
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How to Type French Accents? Copy
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Coming Soon!
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Week 1, Day 1Introduce yourself Copy1 Quiz
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Week 1, Day 1: Basics of Pronunciation / Greetings Copy
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Week 1, Day 2 : Pronunciation / Verb être (to be) Copy
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Graded Essay Exercise (ver 1)
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Graded Essay Exercise (ver 2)1 Quiz
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Week 1, Day 3 : Family Members and Jobs Vocabulary, Sounds Unique to the French Language, Verb Avoir Copy1 Quiz
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Week 1, Day 4 : Family and How to Count Copy1 Quiz
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Week 1, Day 5: Conjugating Verbs, 1st group (er) Copy1 Quiz
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Week 1 French Roleplay Challenge Copy
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WEEK 1 – Recap Copy1 Quiz
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Week 2, Day 1: Definite/Indefinite Articles, Food and Beverage Copy1 Quiz
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Week 2, Day 2: Fruits and Partitive Articles Copy1 Quiz
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Week 2, Day 3 : Passé Composé (Compound Past Tense) and Time Copy1 Quiz
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Week 2, Day 4: Perfect Tense with “être” Copy1 Quiz
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Week 2, Day 5: Placement and Agreement of Adjectives Copy1 Quiz
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Week 2 French Roleplay Challenge Copy
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WEEK 2 - Recap Copy2 Quizzes
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Week 3, Day 1: Professions (2nd Part) and Demonstrative Adjectives Copy1 Quiz
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Week 3, Day 2: Asking Questions Copy1 Quiz
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Week 3, Day 3 – List of Useful Verbs Copy1 Quiz
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Week 3, Day 4: Possessive Adjectives and Possessive Pronouns Copy1 Quiz
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Week 3, Day 5: Most Useful Verbs (Part 2) Copy1 Quiz
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Week 3 French Roleplay Challenge Copy
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WEEK 3 – Recap Copy1 Quiz
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Week 4, Day 1: Imperfect Tense Copy1 Quiz
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Week 4, Day 2: The Perfect Tense (Passé Composé) vs. The Imperfect Tense (Imparfait) Copy1 Quiz
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Week 4, Day 3: Vocabulary Related to Cinema and Movies Copy1 Quiz
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Week 4, Day 4: Describing People Copy1 Quiz
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Week 4, Day 5: More Vocabulary and the 2nd Group Verbs Copy1 Quiz
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Week 4 French Roleplay Challenge Copy
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WEEK 4 – Recap Copy2 Quizzes
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Week 1-4 Monthly Recap Evaluation Copy1 Quiz
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Conclusion Copy
Welcome back! In today’s lesson, we are going to learn a new verb, “aller,” which in English translates as “to go.” This is an irregular verb, which means it is a little tricky to learn, but some of the rules are similar to “être” and “avoir” so you should find it a bit easier.
In the table below are the conjugations of “aller” into the present tense, which translate roughly to “I am going/He is going/You are going,” etc.
Listen to Week 5 Day 3 Track 1
English | French | |
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Pronoun | Pronoun | Verb “aller” |
I | Je | vais |
You | Tu | vas |
He | Il | va |
She | Elle | va |
We | Nous | allons |
You | Vous | allez |
They (at least one man) | Ils | vont |
They (all women) | Elles | vont |
Read along with the dialogue below, then have a go at practicing your pronunciation.
Please note that in French, the formula for conjugating “aller” in the present tense is “aller in present + infinitive,” and this refers to an action in the near future. It is very similar to saying “going to” in English and it is the closest you can get to this meaning between the two languages. Do not forget to make sure you are using the correct conjugations for the pronouns you are using!
Speaking Practice 1
Location Places Vocabulary
Speaking Practice 2
A Quick Recap of this Lesson
- It’s all about the important verb “aller” today.
- You learned how to conjugate this verb in the present tense.
- You did practice exercises to make the lessons stick.
Responses