melsc said:
Does anyone know all the formations of the Subjunctive tense... all i need is perfect, present and future
In answer to the question in a personal sense - No! Haha. Oh dear - the fun that is subjunctive.
For French Continuers in the HSC I think we only ever go as far as the Present Subjunctive, leaving the rest mentioned^ purely optional. Even though the present Subjunctive goes into bigger territory, generally it impresses well in exams (according to my teacher.). Well said shazzam in "[about other forms of the subj.] which honestly is an unneccessary burden for you to learn for HSC French"...
If you want tables and tables and lists upon lists of conjugations, I highly recommend http://tv5.mediadico.com/mediadico-tv5/asp/dicoweb.asp, type in a verb, select conjugation mode, and you have more conjugations than you can poke a participle at. (Though in retentive grammatically correct country we'd go 'to have more conjugations at which you can poke a stick...', therefore saving us from the mortal sin of prepositions at the end of sentences
).
The present is the most common used at Continuers level - as described above. Though that's really it, until one, I assume, gets into the heavy literature at uni. The tense described in #2 is actually the Perfect, as the Perfect is the other name for the
passé composé, of course the past formed with
avoir + past participle. The Perfect Subjunctive would be the present subjunctive form of
avoir with the normal past participle. Donc:
j'aie + pp
tu aies + pp
il ait + pp
nous ayons + pp
vous ayez + pp
ils aient + pp
I've seen this version of the past more often, but as shazzam puts it the 'passé simple' is all but dead in common use except for really literary situations (If you have season 1 of 'Futurama' on DVD, put the Mars University episode on, at the very end when they reflect on that they do, at the very end, with the captions, the French subtitles use the passé simple, but htis is not much related to the subjunctive lol...)
The actual USES of subjunctive that's another kettle of fish! Laura K Lawless' lessons at french.about.com are usually good:
http://french.about.com/library/weekly/aa111599.htm
Here's a table of verb tenses and where they fall on the timeline:
http://french.about.com/library/bl_timelinee.htm