The present tense in FrenchIrregular verbs - avoir and être
Use the present tense to describe what happens regularly and what is happening now. Get to grips with regular and irregular verbs and check your understanding with activities and a quiz.
Avoir (to have) and être (to be) are key verbs that are used in lots of constructions.
An illustration of how avoir and être, two common French verbs, are conjugated
Avoir is irregular, so it doesn’t follow the same rules as regular verbs:
j’ai
I have
tu as
you have
il/elle/on a
he/she/it has
nous avons
we have
vous avez
you have
ils/ells ont
they have
j’ai
I have
tu as
you have
il/elle/on a
he/she/it has
nous avons
we have
vous avez
you have
ils/ells ont
they have
Avoir is often used in the same way as ‘to have’ in English. For example:
J’ai un chien. – I have a dog.
Ils ont une maison en France. – They have a house in France.
However, it sometimes translates to the verb ‘to be’, or it is found in expressions where completely different verbs are used in English. Common expressions using avoir include:
avoir chaud – to be hot
avoir froid – to be cold
avoir faim – to be hungry
avoir soif – to be thirsty
avoir raison – to be right
avoir tort – to be wrong
avoir … ans – to be … years old
avoir besoin de – to need
avoir envie de – to want to
Être (to be) is another common irregular verb:
je suis
I am
tu es
you are
il/elle/on est
he/she/it is
nous sommes
we are
vous êtes
you are
ils/elles sont
they are
je suis
I am
tu es
you are
il/elle/on est
he/she/it is
nous sommes
we are
vous êtes
you are
ils/elles sont
they are
Être is often used with adjectives. For example:
Ma mère est italienne. – My mum is Italian.
Je suis très grand(e). – I am very tall.
Ils sont travailleurs. – They are hardworking.
Choose the correct form ofavoirorêtrefor these sentences.
Question
Je [suis/sommes/sont] plus petit que toi.
Je suis plus petit que toi. - I am smaller than you.
Question
Ma mère [est/a/ont] quarante ans.
Ma mère a quarante ans. - My mum is 40 years old.
‘To be’ is used to talk about ages in English, but in French avoir is used.
Question
Le Louvre [suis/es/est] un musée important.
Le Louvre est un musée important. - The Louvre is an important museum.
Question
Tu [es/as/a] raison – on n’a pas de devoirs ce soir.
Tu as raison – on n’a pas de devoirs ce soir. - You’re right – we don’t have any homework this evening.
Although we say ‘to be right’ in English, we say avoir raison in French and therefore a form of avoir is needed here.