D - Devenir
R - Revenir
M - Montrer
R - Rentrer
S - Sortir
V - Venir
A - Aller
N - Naitre
D - Descendre
E - Entrer
R - Rester
T - Tomber
R - Retourner
A - Arriver
M - Mourir
P - Partir
(P) - Passer
There the verbs in french that are conjugated with 'être' in passé composé.The acronym stands for:Descendre VenirRetourner AllerNaitreMonter DevinirRevenir EntrerSortir RentrerTomberPasser ResterAllerMourirPartir
"Dr. Mrs. Vandertramp" is the mnemonic for English speakers to remember which French verbs are conjugated in "passé composé" with the "être" auxiliary instead of "avoir". Each letter of the mnemonic represents one verb: Devenir - to become Revenir - to return Mourir - to die Rester - to stay Sortir - to go out/Exit Venir - to come Arriver - to arrive Naître - to be born Descendre - to descend or go down Entrer - to enter Rentrer - to return home Tomber - to fall Retourner - to return Aller - to go Monter - to climb/to go up Partir - to part/ to leave Passer and Deceder are also conjugated with "être" in some cases, like when they mean 'to pass by' and 'to decease'. Not much of a mnemonic, since remember initials apply to thousand of words and verbs, not just one verb per letter, let alone a whole list.
In the passé composé, the past participle used depends on the auxiliary verb (être or avoir) and the subject of the sentence. With être as the auxiliary, the past participle must agree in gender and number with the subject. With avoir, the past participle does not agree with the subject unless the direct object comes before the verb and is a person or group of people.
Sortir (to go out) is not a regular verb. This is the present conjugation: Je sors tu sors il sort elle sort nous sortons vous sortez ils sortent elles sortent Past participle= sorti Sortir is a DR MRS VANDERTRAMP verb, therefore in the past, sortir takes etre.
They go after Dr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Young
Dr. and Mrs. or Mr. and Dr.
You use etre for "Dr and Mrs Vandertramp" or "house" verbs. You also use etre for reflexive verbs like se lever, se coucher, se sentir. Don't forget to conjugate etre and use the passe compose end form of the verb (er=e(with accent), re=u, ir=i). The most common etre passe compose is "Je suis ne(e)." = I was born.
No, it is Dr. and Mrs. Ramesh
Dr.- If male. Dr.(Mrs.)- If married female. Dr.- If unwed female. Dr. and Dr.(Mrs.)- If the couple are both physicians.
You just did it , except you put a period behind after Dr. & Mrs. , as they are abbreviations.
D: Descendre (descendu) R: Rester (resté) M: Monter (monté) R: Rentrer (rentré) S: Sortir (sorti) V: Venir (venu) A: Aller (allé) N: Naître (ne) D: Devenir (devenu) E: Entrer (entré) R: Revenir (revenu) T: Tomber (tombé) R: Retourner (retourné) A: Arriver (arrivé) M: Mourir (mort) P: Partir (parti) Le passé compose: Conjugated form of "avoir" and the past participle. Conjugated form of "être" and the past participle, which must agree with the subject.
The verbs in the sentence are "is" (a linking verb) and "coming" (the main action verb).