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To talk about an event that took place at a specific point in the past and is now completed we use the passé composé. The passé composé is formed by the present tense of the verbs avoir or être and the past participle of the verb. |
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Most verbs use avoir. Those that require the auxiliary être are, very often, verbs of motion, such as venir. Devenir also follows this pattern.
With the auxiliary être, the past participle agrees with the subject. The pronunciation, however, does not change. |
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changer |
devenir |
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