When to Use the French Imperative (Commands) Correctly

When to Use the French Imperative (Commands) Correctly

When to Use the French Imperative (Commands) Correctly

You know the verb. You know the tense. Then you try to say “Come here,” “Let’s go,” or “Don’t forget,” and suddenly French feels slippery again. The French imperative looks simple on paper, but the moment reflexive verbs and pronouns show up, a lot of learners freeze.

Quick answer: the French imperative gives commands, instructions, invitations, and advice. It uses only tu, nous, and vous forms, usually without the subject pronoun: Viens ! (Come!), Allons-y ! (Let’s go!), Attendez ! (Wait!). The tricky parts are the irregular forms, negative commands, and pronoun placement.

Quick facts: French imperative
Main useCommands, instructions, invitations, advice Forms usedtu, nous, and vous only Key irregularsêtre → sois, soyons, soyez; avoir → aie, ayons, ayez Big trapPronoun position changes in positive vs negative commands

What the French imperative actually does

The imperative is the form you use when you want someone to do something. That includes direct commands, but also softer uses like suggestions, recipes, instructions, and encouragement.

You’ll hear it everywhere:

English often uses “you” explicitly in commands, but French usually drops the subject pronoun. So instead of tu viens !, you say viens ! (come!).

This matters for speaking speed. Native speakers don’t build commands by mentally reciting a whole conjugation table first. They retrieve the command form directly. That’s one reason we built VerbPal around active production drills: you need to produce dis-le (say it), ne te lève pas (don’t get up), or allons-y (let’s go) under pressure, not just recognise them on a page.

When you’ll use it most

You’ll use the imperative for:

Corpus-based frequency lists consistently show that high-frequency verbs like être, avoir, aller, faire, dire, prendre, and venir dominate spoken and written French. That means imperative mastery pays off quickly, because the same common verbs appear in commands again and again. In VerbPal, that is exactly where we start: high-frequency verbs first, then broader coverage across all tenses, irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive once the core patterns are stable.

Pro Tip: Don’t learn the imperative as an isolated grammar chapter. Learn it through high-frequency verbs you actually say: va (go), viens (come), fais (do/make), prends (take), dis (say/tell), attends (wait), regarde (look/watch).

How to form the French imperative: tu, nous, vous

The good news: for most verbs, the imperative is built from the present tense forms of tu, nous, and vous — but you remove the subject pronoun.

Regular pattern

Take parler (to speak):

Pronoun Form English
tuparlespeak
nousparlonslet’s speak
vousparlezspeak / please speak

Examples:

Choosing between tu, vous, and nous

Use tu for one person you address informally

Example: Attends une seconde. (Wait a second.)

Use vous for one person formally or several people

Examples:

Use nous for “let’s…”

This is one of the most useful everyday patterns in French.

Examples:

If you want a broader refresher on how French verb forms map across persons and tenses, our French conjugation tables help — but for real speaking, you’ll progress faster when you type the forms yourself. That is why our VerbPal sessions push active recall instead of passive recognition.

Pro Tip: When you see “Let’s…” in English, think nous imperative first: allons (let’s go), faisons (let’s do/make), prenons (let’s take), essayons (let’s try).

The small but important -s rule in tu commands

Here’s the classic trap: many -er verbs and a few similar verbs lose the final -s in the tu imperative.

So:

Not:

Examples:

But sometimes the -s comes back

If the command is followed by y or en, French often adds the -s back for smoother pronunciation.

This is a sound-based convenience rule more than a meaning rule.

When learners miss this, it is usually not because the rule is hard. It is because the chunk is not yet automatic. We see that a lot with short command forms, so in VerbPal we recycle pairs like va / vas-y (go / go ahead) and parle / parles-en (speak / talk about it) using SM-2 spaced repetition, which brings them back just before you are likely to forget them.

If you're also working on spoken French, this “write one thing, hear another” pattern shows up everywhere. You may also like French pronunciation and spelling mismatch and why the -ent ending in French verbs is silent.

🐶
Lexi's Tip

Cheat code: for most tu commands, imagine the present tense and then “drop the passenger.” If it’s an -er verb, the final -s usually gets off too: tu regardes → regarde (you look → look). But if y or en jumps in, the -s often comes back to make the sentence flow: vas-y (go ahead), parles-en (talk about it). Smooth paws, smooth French.

Pro Tip: Memorise these as chunks, not rules alone: va (go), vas-y (go ahead), parle (speak), parles-en (talk about it). Chunks come out faster in conversation.

The imperative irregulars you actually need

Most imperative forms are predictable, but a few very common verbs are irregular. The two you absolutely need early are être and avoir.

Être → sois, soyons, soyez

Pronoun Form English
tusoisbe
noussoyonslet’s be
voussoyezbe

Examples:

Avoir → aie, ayons, ayez

Pronoun Form English
tuaiehave
nousayonslet’s have
vousayezhave

Examples:

Other common imperative forms worth learning early

These aren’t irregular in the same way, but they’re so common that you should know them cold:

Examples:

If you want more high-frequency command verbs, our post on the 100 most common French verbs pairs well with imperative study. And if you are using VerbPal, this is a good point to build a short deck of must-know command verbs before you branch out.

Pro Tip: Prioritise imperative forms of the top 20 spoken verbs before you chase edge cases. That gives you the biggest return in real conversations.

Pronoun placement in the French imperative

This is where many learners start hesitating. In the imperative, pronouns do not always sit where they sit in a normal sentence.

Positive commands: pronouns come after the verb

In affirmative imperative sentences, object pronouns usually follow the verb and connect with hyphens.

Notice the order and the hyphens:

Negative commands: pronouns go back before the verb

As soon as the command becomes negative, the pronouns move back in front of the verb.

Positive command

Pronoun usually comes after the verb: Donne-le-moi (Give it to me).

Negative command

Pronoun goes back before the verb: Ne me le donne pas (Don’t give it to me).

Me and te become moi and toi in positive imperatives

In affirmative commands, me and te usually become moi and toi after the verb.

But in negative commands, they go back to normal:

This is one of those grammar points that learners often “understand” but still can’t produce quickly. In VerbPal, we drill these contrasts directly so you retrieve the right order on cue: dis-le (say it), ne le dis pas (don’t say it), lève-toi (get up), ne te lève pas (don’t get up). That is far more useful than rereading the rule five times.

Which is correct: Donne-me-le or Donne-le-moi?

Donne-le-moi is correct. In a positive imperative, object pronouns come after the verb, linked by hyphens, and me becomes moi.

Pro Tip: Learn pronoun imperatives in pairs: dis-le / ne le dis pas (say it / don’t say it), donne-moi / ne me donne pas (give me / don’t give me), vas-y / n’y va pas (go ahead / don’t go there).

Reflexive imperatives: the form learners trip over most

Reflexive verbs look intimidating in commands because both the verb and the reflexive pronoun change position.

Take se lever (to get up).

Positive reflexive imperative

In affirmative commands, the reflexive pronoun goes after the verb, and te becomes toi.

Take se souvenir (to remember):

Negative reflexive imperative

In negative commands, the reflexive pronoun goes back before the verb.

Reflexive + y/en

You may also see patterns like:

This one is worth memorising as a fixed chunk.

If reflexive verbs still feel messy, our post on French reflexive verbs through your morning routine gives you a more intuitive way to internalise them. In VerbPal, reflexives are especially worth typing out because recognition is easy, but production is where learners usually break down.

Reflexive imperatives follow the same logic as other imperatives: positive commands push pronouns after the verb, negative commands pull them back before it.

Pro Tip: Drill reflexive commands as opposites: lève-toi / ne te lève pas (get up / don’t get up), dépêche-toi / ne te dépêche pas (hurry up / don’t hurry), souviens-toi / ne te souviens pas (remember / don’t remember).

Common situations where the French imperative sounds natural

Many learners underuse the imperative because “command” sounds harsh. In real French, though, the imperative often sounds perfectly normal — or even polite — depending on context and tone.

Directions and instructions

Everyday conversation

Suggestions with nous

Recipes, manuals, signs

You’ll also hear softened imperatives with s’il te plaît or s’il vous plaît:

French often uses the imperative where English might choose “can you…?” or “could you…?” That doesn’t automatically make it rude. One practical way we train this at VerbPal is by mixing command forms into realistic contexts, so you stop treating them as isolated textbook lines and start hearing where they actually belong.

Pro Tip: Don’t translate tone word-for-word from English. Judge politeness in French by formality, context, and softeners like s’il vous plaît (please), not by whether a sentence uses the imperative.

The most common mistakes with French commands

Even strong learners make the same few imperative mistakes. If you fix these, your French sounds much more natural immediately.

1. Keeping the subject pronoun

Incorrect:

Correct:

2. Forgetting the missing -s in tu forms of -er verbs

Incorrect:

Correct:

3. Forgetting that y/en can bring the -s back

Incorrect:

Correct:

4. Using regular forms instead of irregular imperative forms

Incorrect:

Correct:

5. Putting pronouns in the wrong place

Incorrect:

Correct:

6. Forgetting moi/toi in positive reflexive or object commands

Incorrect:

Correct:

7. Mixing up positive and negative reflexive patterns

Incorrect:

Correct:

If you notice that you can explain these rules but still make them while speaking, that’s not a knowledge problem — it’s a retrieval problem. Our 10-minute French verb drill routine and moving French verbs from passive study to active speaking explain why.

Pro Tip: Keep a personal “error bank” of imperative mistakes. Then drill only those forms until they feel boringly automatic.

A simple method to master the French imperative faster

You do not need 200 command forms on day one. You need a small, high-value core that you can produce accurately and fast.

Step 1: Learn the three functions

Step 2: Memorise the must-know irregulars

Step 3: Drill positive vs negative pairs

Step 4: Practise with high-frequency verbs

Use verbs like:

Step 5: Produce, don’t just review

Conjugation charts help you verify forms. They do not guarantee fluent recall. At VerbPal, we use SM-2 spaced repetition to bring command forms back just before you forget them, and Lexi 🐶 pops up in sessions with pattern-based reminders when a rule needs to stick. Because we cover French systematically — including irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive — the imperative fits into a bigger verb system instead of living in its own little grammar box.

That matters because imperative forms often fail under pressure: ordering, asking, warning, directing, reacting. Production practice is what closes that gap.

Pro Tip: Build one mini-drill set around a single contrast: affirmative, negative, pronoun, reflexive. Example: assieds-toi / ne t’assieds pas / asseyez-vous / ne vous asseyez pas (sit down / don’t sit down / sit down / don’t sit down).

FAQ: French imperative commands

Is the French imperative always a command?

No. It often gives a command, but it can also express advice, instructions, invitations, encouragement, or polite requests. Allons-y means “Let’s go,” not an order barked at someone.

Do I always remove the subject pronoun in the imperative?

Yes, in standard imperative forms you drop the subject pronoun: Parle ! (Speak!), not Tu parle ! The imperative normally appears without tu, nous, or vous.

Why is it sois and not es?

Because être has an irregular imperative. The correct forms are sois, soyons, soyez (be, let’s be, be). You have to memorise them.

Why is it donne-moi but ne me donne pas?

Because positive imperatives place pronouns after the verb, while negative imperatives place them before the verb. Also, me becomes moi after the verb in positive commands.

Is veuillez really an imperative?

Yes. It comes from vouloir and appears in formal written or spoken requests, especially signs, announcements, and customer service language: Veuillez patienter. (Please wait.)

Put it into practice

If this post helped you understand the rules, the next step is retrieval. Imperatives break down when you have to choose fast between dis-le (say it), ne le dis pas (don’t say it), lève-toi (get up), and ne te lève pas (don’t get up). That is where VerbPal helps most: short, typed drills that force the exact contrast at the right time, so the form becomes automatic instead of theoretical.

Final takeaway: make French commands automatic, not theoretical

If you want the French imperative to feel natural, stop treating it like a one-page rule sheet. Learn the three forms, lock in the irregulars, then drill the contrasts that cause hesitation: positive vs negative, pronoun after vs pronoun before, reflexive after vs reflexive before. Once those patterns become automatic, commands stop feeling like grammar and start feeling like speech.

Pro Tip: Start with ten command chunks you will actually say this week, then type them from memory until you can produce them without pausing.

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