French Verb Conjugations
| Present | Imperfect | Future | Conditional | Subjunctive | Imperfect subj. | |||
| j’ | acclame | acclamais | acclamerai | acclamerais | acclame | acclamasse | ||
| tu | acclames | acclamais | acclameras | acclamerais | acclames | acclamasses | ||
| il | acclame | acclamait | acclamera | acclamerait | acclame | acclamât | ||
| nous | acclamons | acclamions | acclamerons | acclamerions | acclamions | acclamassions | ||
| vous | acclamez | acclamiez | acclamerez | acclameriez | acclamiez | acclamassiez | ||
| ils | acclament | acclamaient | acclameront | acclameraient | acclament | acclamassent | ||
| Passé composé | Past perfect | Future perfect | Past conditional | Past subjunctive | Pluperfect subj. | |||
| j’ | ai acclamé | avais acclamé | aurai acclamé | aurais acclamé | aie acclamé | eusse acclamé | ||
| tu | as acclamé | avais acclamé | auras acclamé | aurais acclamé | aies acclamé | eusses acclamé | ||
| il | a acclamé | avait acclamé | aura acclamé | aurait acclamé | ait acclamé | eût acclamé | ||
| nous | avons acclamé | avions acclamé | aurons acclamé | aurions acclamé | ayons acclamé | eussions acclamé | ||
| vous | avez acclamé | aviez acclamé | aurez acclamé | auriez acclamé | ayez acclamé | eussiez acclamé | ||
| ils | ont acclamé | avaient acclamé | auront acclamé | auraient acclamé | aient acclamé | eussent acclamé | ||
| Passé simple | Past anterior | Imperative | Participles | |||||
| j’ | acclamai | eus acclamé | (tu) | acclame | Present | acclamant | ||
| tu | acclamas | eus acclamé | (nous) | acclamons | Past | acclamé | ||
| il | acclama | eut acclamé | (vous) | acclamez | Perfect | ayant acclamé | ||
| nous | acclamâmes | eûmes acclamé | Past imperative | |||||
| vous | acclamâtes | eûtes acclamé | (tu) | aie acclamé | Past infinitive | |||
| ils | acclamèrent | eurent acclamé | (nous) | ayons acclamé | avoir acclamé | |||
| (vous) | ayez acclamé | |||||||
Acclamer is a regular -er verb.

The French lessons and comprehension exercises on this site are ranked according to the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR), which describes six levels of language proficiency.
When a word ending in a normally silent consonant is followed by a vowel or h muet, that consonant might be transferred onto the next word. This is called a liaison and it’s one of the aspects of French pronunciation that can make it difficult to determine where one word ends and the next begins.
Aller is one of the most common and important French verbs. It generally means “to go,” is key to the near future construction, and is also found in many expressions. This issue of Lawless French à fond takes an in-depth look at going everywhere with 
