French Verb Conjugations
| Present | Imperfect | Future | Conditional | Subjunctive | Imperfect subj. | |||
| il | pleuvine | pleuvinait | pleuvinera | pleuvinerait | pleuvine | pleuvinât | ||
| Passé composé | Past perfect | Future perfect | Past conditional | Past subjunctive | Pluperfect subj. | |||
| il | a pleuviné | avait pleuviné | aura pleuviné | aurait pleuviné | ait pleuviné | eût pleuviné | ||
| Passé simple | Past anterior | Imperative | Participles | |||||
| il | plut | eut pleuviné | n/a | Present | pleuvinant | |||
| Past | pleuviné | |||||||
| Past imperative | Perfect | ayant pleuviné | ||||||
| n/a | ||||||||
| Past infinitive | ||||||||
| avoir pleuviné | ||||||||
Pleuviner is a regular -er verb and is impersonal.
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Jouer is a regular -er French verb that can be a bit confusing when it comes time to decide which preposition should follow. Here’s everything you need to know.

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.