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Olivia
why the word "asseoir" has two set of forms??
why this word has two set of forms? do they have different meanings?
1. j' assieds nous asseyons
tu assieds vous asseyez
il/elle assied ils/elles asseyent
2. j' assois nous assoyons
tu assois vous assoyez
il/elle assoit ils/elles assoient
Jan 23, 2009 2:08 PM
Answers · 2
3
I'm not sure, but I think the original form was "assied", and "assois" is just some kind of common usage that was used so much it had to be accepted.
Anyway, both are good. We mostly use the "assois" form here in Canada : maybe it's much different in France. I don't know. For us, someone that says "je m'assieds" either didn't learn french in Quebec, or tries to give himself some pompous style of speaking. In either cases, it sounds a bit weird.
We do conjugate it commonly using the imperative form, as in "Assied-toi !", "Sit down !".
January 25, 2009
Hello Olivia,
I am not sure of the reason. This verb is actually mainly used as a reflexive verb. The "ie/ey" forms (Je m'assieds, ...) are better than the other ones.
Présent
je m'assieds / je m'assois
tu t'assieds / tu t'assois
il/elle s'assied / il/elle s'assoit
nous nous asseyons / nous nous assoyons
vous vous asseyez / vous vous assoyez
ils/elles s'asseyent / ils/elles s'assoient
January 23, 2009
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Olivia
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, French, Russian
Learning Language
English, French, Russian
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