The past imperative or
é du subjonctif in french, is a
compound tense, which means it has two parts:
- the auxiliary verb in present imperative (either être)
- the past participle of the main verb
Grammatical agreement 111249
Like all French compound conjugations, the past imperative may be subject to grammatical agreement:
- When the auxiliary verb is être, the past participle must agree with the subject, except for reflexive verbs (same rules as conjugation with auxiliary avoir) and invariable past participles.
- When the auxiliary verb is avoir, the past participle must agree with its direct object when the direct object is placed before the verb.
Auxiliaries conjugation in present imperative 6b4y4q
Here is the french conjugation of auxiliaries
être in present imperative to compose past imperative.