Skip to Content

French past participles

French past participles

📘 What is a French past participle?

A French past participle is a verb form used to express completed actions, similar to “-ed” or “-en” in English (e.g., mangé = eaten, fini = finished, pris = taken). Past participles are mainly used with the auxiliary verbs avoir or être to form compound tenses such as the passé composé. For example, J’ai parlé means “I spoke”, “I have spoken”, or “I did speak”, where parlé is the past participle.

French past participles — formation, rules and examples — French grammar lesson

How past participles are used

Past participles are used in three main ways in French:

1. With compound tenses (most common)
Used with avoir or être to talk about past actions.

J’ai fini. I finished.
Elle est partie. She left.

2. As adjectives
They can describe nouns and must agree in gender and number.

Une porte fermée. A closed door.
Des lettres écrites. Written letters.

3. In the passive voice
Used with être to describe actions done to the subject.

Le livre est lu. The book is read.
La maison est construite. The house is built.

Regular past participles

French regular verbs follow simple patterns based on their infinitive endings:

Verb typeInfinitivePast participleMeaning
-ER verbsparlerparléspoke
-IR verbsfinirfinifinished
-RE verbsattendreattenduwaited

👉 Rule summary:

  • -er → -é
  • -ir → -i
  • -re → -u

These patterns cover the majority of verbs, especially at the beginner level.

Common irregular past participles

These irregular past participles are extremely common and appear constantly in everyday spoken French.

InfinitivePast participleMeaning
avoireuhad
êtreétébeen
fairefaitdone / made
savoirsuknown
direditsaid
écrireécritwritten
prendrepristaken
mettremisput
voirvuseen
pouvoirpubeen able to
vouloirvouluwanted
falloirfalluhad to / was necessary
devoirhad to
boirebudrunk
lireluread
connaîtreconnuknown
venirvenucome

Agreement rules (quick overview)

Past participle agreement depends on the auxiliary verb:

With être → always agrees with the subject
Elle est allée. She went. (extra “e” for feminine)

With avoir → agrees only if a direct object comes before
Les lettres que j’ai écrites. The letters that I wrote. (agrees with lettres)

Otherwise → no agreement
J’ai écrit une lettre. I wrote a letter.

📚 Related lessons on FrenchLearner

👉 Passé composé (complete guide) »
👉 Être verbs in the past tense »
👉 Être conjugation (with audio) »
👉 Avoir conjugation (with audio) »
👉 French verb conjugation guide »
👉 French passive voice »

author avatar
David Issokson Founder & French Teacher at FrenchLearner.com
David Issokson is the founder of FrenchLearner.com, where he’s been helping students master French through vocabulary, grammar, and cultural lessons since 2012.

    David Issokson

    About the Author – David Issokson David Issokson is an online French teacher and the founder of FrenchLearner.com (established 2012). He has been teaching French online since 2014 and brings over 30 years of experience as a passionate French learner and fluent speaker. David creates clear, structured lessons supported by native audio recorded by Marie Assel Cambier, a professional voice artist and native French speaker. A graduate of McGill University in Montreal, he has taught hundreds of learners worldwide and publishes daily French lessons for more than 13,000 email subscribers. 📘 About David » 🌐 David’s personal site » 👍 Follow on Facebook »

    See all posts by