8 tenses with different conjugation for every pronoun...

> 8 tenses with different conjugation for every pronoun , 4 moods each has 4 different types with a different conjugation again for every pronoun.
Why does french do this , fuck french

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_mood
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Just ignore them.

>4 moods
What's that?

french people have 4 emotions
hatred
arrogance
disgust
horniness

I think i used the wrong terme , i mean stuff like "subjonctif", "conditionel", "gerondif"

Once you get used to the language it is easy to guess the correct prononciation

most people don't use all of them

literally took me an afternoon to learn how french grammar works. git gud

It also helps that most of the "terminaisons" have no effect on the prononciation , so spoken French is easier than written french but still fuck gendered nouns

Only "indicatif" and "conditionnel" really matter

Mode

This nigga really think french is hard while speaking fucking arabic as a mother tongue

et progressif

Arabic is really not that hard

That's false, subjonctif is crucial
But gérondif is extremely simple so it doesn't really count

>progressif
What?

progressive

I don't know what you're referring to
Is it a mode? An aspect?

tense

Having studied both I'll say is way harder than French

Sadly we don't really have it in French, at least not as clearly as the English "ing" form
Also, in French we'd rather call it an "aspect" I think

>I think i used the wrong terme
No, it's the correct term.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_mood

i mean like en train de

>gerondif
Never heard of this lmao. It's probably a thing but no one uses it

Precision, and its useful for poetry

you don't remember how hard languages are to learn when you already know them, its also really easy to learn a language when you are 6-10 years old where most people learn their mother tongues.
arabic is more sophisticated and retarded than french by the way.

I know, but it's extremely simple compared to subjonctif/indicatif. Plus it's not as predominant as the English progressive tense, which is omnipresent

>It's probably a thing but no one uses it
It's very common and stupidly simple

>implying he's not a poo

>qatar is poo
>estonia poster

you can't, HONHONHONHON

My French used to be pretty sharp for a burger but I don't remember eight tenses...

It's real but some are only used in literature

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Yeah okay I guess most of these constructions do look familiar. Passé simple, though, tf is that?

Overwhelmingly used in writings, you can't avoid it if you start reading classic French books but nobody expects you to speak like this

Same for the Passé antérieur

Oh word yeah I missed that one. I've never seen those endings in my life. Doesn't seem any harder to pick up than the rest though.

>t. native syrup poster

I'd say they can be considered as easier even, their peculiarity allows for an easy identification whereas it's a real risk to mistake and mispell the other ones when they sometimes look and sound so alike

Just read some easy books. It's not hard to pick up at all

It's not so different from Italian. Most of these are probably rarely used