The Past Subjunctive in French (Le subjonctif passé)
1. What Is the Past Subjunctive?
The past subjunctive (le subjonctif passé) is a verb tense in French used to express a completed action in situations where the subjunctive mood is required. It combines the idea of doubt, emotion, or necessity with the fact that the action has already happened. Think of it as the “finished version” of the present subjunctive.
For example, instead of saying “I’m glad you are here” (present), you would say “I’m glad you came” — the action of coming is now in the past.
2. Simple Examples to Get Started
Here are a few quick examples to show the difference:
- 🟡 Present subjunctive: Je suis content que tu viennes. → I’m glad that you are coming.
- 🟢 Past subjunctive: Je suis content que tu sois venu(e). → I’m glad that you came.
- 🟡 Present subjunctive: Il faut que tu finisses ton travail. → You need to finish your work.
- 🟢 Past subjunctive: Il est dommage que tu n’aies pas fini ton travail. → It’s a shame that you didn’t finish your work.
3. The Key Elements of the Past Subjunctive in French
The past subjunctive is built from two parts. Understanding each part makes it much easier to use correctly.
3.1 How to Form It
The past subjunctive is formed using:
- The present subjunctive of the auxiliary verb (avoir or être)
- + the past participle of the main verb
Here is the formula:
| Structure | Example with avoir | Example with être |
|---|---|---|
| Subjunctive of auxiliary + past participle | que j’aie mangé (that I ate) | que je sois parti(e) (that I left) |
3.2 Conjugation Tables
Let’s look at full conjugations for two verbs: parler (to speak) with avoir, and partir (to leave) with être.
With avoir — parler (to speak)
| Subject |
|---|