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The passé composé, the most common French past tense for completed actions [], is formed using two components: a conjugated auxiliary verb (either "avoir" or "être") and the past participle of the main verb []. For most verbs, "avoir" is the auxiliary, with the past participle created by dropping the infinitive ending and adding specific endings for -er, -ir, and -re verbs (e.g., "parler" becomes "parlé", "finir" becomes "fini", and "vendre" becomes "vendu") [-].
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The passé composé, the most common French past tense for completed actions [], is formed using two components: a conjugated auxiliary verb (either "avoir" or "être") and the past participle of the main verb []. For most verbs, "avoir" is the auxiliary, with the past participle created by dropping the infinitive ending and adding specific endings for -er, -ir, and -re verbs (e.g., "parler" becomes "parlé", "finir" becomes "fini", and "vendre" becomes "vendu") [-].