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French · Verb · #706 most common

blesser

to injure
to hurt

Regular1st ending

In the tables below, the stem is shown in black and the ending in purple.

1.

Présent

Current actions, habits, and general truths.

jeblesse
tublesse
il/elleblesse
nousblessons
vousblessez
ils/ellesblessent
2.

Passé Composé

Completed past actions with present relevance.

jeai blessé
tuas blessé
il/ellea blessé
nousavons blessé
vousavez blessé
ils/ellesont blessé
3.

Imparfait

Ongoing or habitual past actions, descriptions, and background.

jeblessais
tublessais
il/elleblessait
nousblessions
vousblessiez
ils/ellesblessaient
4.

Futur Simple

Future events, promises, and formal predictions.

jeblesserai
tublesseras
il/elleblessera
nousblesserons
vousblesserez
ils/ellesblesseront
5.

Conditionnel Présent

Hypothetical outcomes, polite requests, and reported future.

jeblesserais
tublesserais
il/elleblesserait
nousblesserions
vousblesseriez
ils/ellesblesseraient
6.

Subjonctif Présent

Doubt, desire, necessity, and emotion in subordinate clauses.

jeblesse
tublesse
il/elleblesse
nousblessions
vousblessiez
ils/ellesblessent
7.

Plus-que-parfait

Actions completed before another past action.

jeavais blessé
tuavais blessé
il/elleavait blessé
nousavions blessé
vousaviez blessé
ils/ellesavaient blessé

Related verbs

Common questions
Is "blesser" regular or irregular in French?
"blesser" is a regular 1st verb in French. It follows the standard conjugation pattern for 1st verbs.
How do you conjugate "blesser" in the present tense?
In the Présent, "blesser" conjugates as: blesse, blesse, blessons, and more. See the full table above.
What is the past tense of "blesser" in French?
In the Passé Composé, "blesser" conjugates as: ai blessé, as blessé, avons blessé, and more. See the full table above.
How common is "blesser" in French?
"blesser" (to injure, to hurt) is one of the most commonly used verbs in French.