The Best Way to Learn French Verbs for the DELF B2

The Best Way to Learn French Verbs for the DELF B2

The Best Way to Learn French Verbs for the DELF B2

You can know the rule for the French subjunctive, recognise the conditional on paper, and still freeze in the DELF B2 when you need to actually produce a verb form fast. That’s the real problem: the exam doesn’t reward vague familiarity. It rewards retrieval under pressure.

Quick answer: the best way to learn French verbs for the DELF B2 is to stop “reviewing” them passively and start drilling the exact forms you need to produce: present, passé composé, imperfect, future, conditional, subjunctive, and common complex structures. You need frequency, active recall, and spaced repetition — not just conjugation tables.

If you’ve ever written il faut que je vais (I have to go.) and then stared at it for five seconds wondering what went wrong, you’re exactly where most B2 learners are. The good news: this is fixable, and faster than you think if you train verbs the right way.

Quick facts: DELF B2 French verbs
Main goalProduce accurate verb forms quickly in speaking and writing Key tensesPresent, passé composé, imparfait, futur simple, conditionnel, subjonctif Biggest mistakeStudying rules without training active production Best methodSpaced repetition + active recall + high-frequency verb drilling

What DELF B2 actually expects from your French verbs

At B2, you do not need to sound literary. You do need to sound controlled, flexible, and accurate enough to support an argument, narrate events, express doubt, make hypotheses, and react naturally.

That means your verb system has to do more than survive basic conversation. It has to let you:

In practice, DELF B2 repeatedly pulls you toward a core set of verb demands:

1. The present tense must be automatic

You still need the present constantly for opinions and general truths:

Je pense que cette mesure est utile. (I think this measure is useful.)

Les jeunes utilisent les réseaux sociaux tous les jours. (Young people use social media every day.)

If your present tense is shaky, everything above it collapses. That’s why we always tell learners to build B2 on a strong production base, not on recognition alone. Our drills in Learn French with VerbPal start there for a reason: you type and produce forms instead of just clicking through them.

2. You need past narration beyond one memorised tense

DELF writing and speaking often require contrast between background and completed events:

Quand j’étais étudiant, je travaillais le soir. (When I was a student, I used to work in the evening.)

L’année dernière, j’ai changé de travail. (Last year, I changed jobs.)

You need to know when to use imparfait for background, habit, and ongoing context, and passé composé for completed events. You do not need perfection worthy of a grammar exam, but you do need reliable control. In VerbPal, this is exactly the kind of contrast we train in sentence context, so you stop treating tenses as isolated tables and start using them as choices.

3. The conditional and subjunctive matter

B2 tasks regularly invite opinion, uncertainty, recommendation, and hypothesis:

Je voudrais souligner un point important. (I would like to highlight an important point.)

Il faudrait investir davantage dans les transports publics. (It would be necessary to invest more in public transport.)

Il faut que le gouvernement prenne des mesures. (The government must take action.)

These are not “advanced extras.” They are core B2 tools.

4. Complex tenses and structures raise your score

You strengthen your range when you can produce structures like:

Si j’avais plus de temps, je lirais davantage. (If I had more time, I would read more.)

Bien que ce soit difficile, c’est possible. (Although it is difficult, it is possible.)

J’aurais aimé partir plus tôt. (I would have liked to leave earlier.)

That kind of control signals B2 much more clearly than stuffing your answer with rare vocabulary.

Pro Tip: Build your DELF B2 verb prep around functions, not chapter names. Train “giving opinions,” “hypothesising,” “recommending,” and “narrating” — then attach the right tenses to those functions.

The verb tenses you should prioritise for DELF B2

You do not need to master every tense equally. You need to prioritise the ones that appear most often in B2 communication.

Corpus studies consistently show that a relatively small group of verbs and tense patterns dominate everyday French. High-frequency verbs like être, avoir, faire, aller, pouvoir, vouloir, devoir, savoir, and prendre carry a huge share of real communication. In Frantext- and frequency-based lists, the top 20–50 verbs account for a very large proportion of running verb use. So if you’re trying to “cover everything,” you’re almost certainly spreading your effort too thin.

Here’s the practical DELF B2 order of priority.

Tier 1: Must be automatic

Tier 2: Very useful

Tier 3: Nice to recognise, less urgent to produce

Here’s a useful reality check:

High-value B2 output

*Je pense que…*, *il faut que…*, *si j'avais… je ferais…*, *j'ai remarqué que…*, *cela permet de…* — these structures appear constantly in speaking and writing.

Low-value distraction

Memorising obscure literary forms or full tables for rare verbs before you can produce common B2 patterns quickly.

If you want a broader high-frequency base, our post on the 100 most common French verbs is a strong companion piece. Inside VerbPal, we recommend building this same priority order into your review queue so your strongest exam forms come back most often.

Pro Tip: Make a “B2 core list” of 30–50 verbs and train them across your priority tenses before adding more vocabulary.

Why conjugation tables alone won’t get you through DELF B2

Conjugation tables feel productive because they are neat, complete, and comforting. But DELF B2 does not ask, “Can you look at a table and recognise a pattern?” It asks, “Can you produce the right form while planning an argument?”

That’s a different skill.

You might know that prendre becomes que je prenne in the subjunctive. But can you produce it instantly in a sentence like:

Il faut que je prenne une décision rapidement. (I have to make a decision quickly.)

Or the conditional in:

Je pourrais accepter cette idée, mais… (I could accept that idea, but…)

Or the mixed past contrast in:

Je pensais que ce serait plus simple. (I thought it would be simpler.)

Recognition is passive. DELF performance is active.

This is exactly why we built VerbPal around active production. In our app, you do not just stare at full paradigms. You retrieve forms from memory, under light pressure, repeatedly, and our spaced repetition engine using the SM-2 algorithm brings them back right before you’re likely to forget them. That’s how forms move from “I’ve seen this” to “I can say this.” We cover all the forms DELF B2 learners actually need: major tenses, irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive.

If you want reference support, use French conjugation tables as a check — not as your main training method. And if you’re curious why tables so often create false confidence, read Why conjugation tables are slowing you down.

A learner who can produce 20 high-frequency verbs accurately in six key tenses will usually outperform a learner who has “studied” 200 verbs passively.

Pro Tip: Use tables for confirmation, then close them and force recall. If you can’t produce the form without looking, you don’t own it yet.

The DELF B2 verb areas that deserve most of your time

This is where smart prep beats more prep. Certain verb areas produce outsized gains because they show up constantly in B2 tasks.

Subjunctive: focus on triggers you actually use

You do not need every possible subjunctive trigger on day one. You need the ones that appear in arguments and recommendations:

Examples:

Il faut que nous agissions vite. (We must act quickly.)

Bien qu’il soit tard, je vais continuer. (Although it is late, I’m going to continue.)

Il est important que les élèves aient accès à la culture. (It is important that students have access to culture.)

If the subjunctive still feels fuzzy, these will help:

Conditional: make it your argument engine

The conditional lets you sound measured, persuasive, and B2-ready:

Je dirais que cette solution est plus réaliste. (I would say that this solution is more realistic.)

On pourrait envisager une autre approche. (One could consider another approach.)

Si les entreprises investissaient davantage, la situation s’améliorerait. (If companies invested more, the situation would improve.)

Complex past structures: enough to control nuance

You do not need to write like a novelist, but you should control common combinations:

J’avais déjà vu ce problème auparavant. (I had already seen this problem before.)

J’aurais préféré une solution plus simple. (I would have preferred a simpler solution.)

Quand je suis arrivé, la réunion avait déjà commencé. (When I arrived, the meeting had already started.)

High-frequency opinion verbs and connectors

Train verbs that let you structure thought:

These let you produce exam-friendly sentences fast. In VerbPal, we encourage learning these as reusable frames rather than naked infinitives, because that is how they appear in real DELF production.

🐶
Lexi's Tip

Here’s the cheat code for B2 verbs: learn them in “frames,” not isolation. Don’t memorise just prendre. Memorise il faut que je prenne, je prendrais, j’ai pris, je prenais. Your brain remembers useful chunks faster than naked tables. Good dog-approved shortcut. 🐶

Pro Tip: For every target verb, learn at least one present, one past, one conditional, and one subjunctive sentence frame.

The best study method: active recall plus spaced repetition

If you want DELF B2-ready verbs, your study method has to match exam reality. That means three things:

  1. You retrieve forms from memory
  2. You revisit them before forgetting
  3. You practise them in sentence context

This is where many learners lose months. They reread notes, highlight endings, and watch explanations. That helps understanding, but it does not build production speed.

A better loop looks like this:

Step 1: Choose a small, high-frequency verb set

Start with 10–15 verbs that matter for B2: être, avoir, faire, aller, pouvoir, vouloir, devoir, savoir, prendre, mettre, dire, penser, croire, falloir, permettre (to be, to have, to do/make, to go, to be able to, to want, to have to, to know, to take, to put, to say, to think, to believe, to be necessary, to allow)

Step 2: Drill across useful forms

For each verb, train:

Step 3: Use prompt-to-production practice

Not “read and nod.” Use prompts like:

Then force yourself to produce the French. This is where VerbPal is stricter than generic language apps: we optimise for recall and written production, not passive recognition or streak-chasing.

Step 4: Review on a schedule

This is where spaced repetition matters. Memory research is clear: retrieval spaced over time beats massed review. In VerbPal, our SM-2 scheduling handles that automatically so the right verbs return when they are most useful for long-term retention. You do the recall; we handle the timing.

Step 5: Rotate between isolated forms and full sentences

You need both:

If you’ve been stuck in passive study, our posts on Using spaced repetition for French irregular verbs and Moving French verbs from passive study to active speaking will sharpen your approach fast.

Pro Tip: If a verb form takes more than two seconds to retrieve, it’s not exam-ready. Put it back into your drill rotation immediately.

A 20-minute DELF B2 verb routine that actually works

Most learners do not need more study time. They need cleaner study structure.

Here’s a realistic 20-minute routine you can run five or six days a week.

Minutes 1–5: Warm up with rapid recall

Review yesterday’s verbs without notes. Say or write:

Example: je peux, nous avons fait, ils voudraient (I can, we have done, they would like)

Minutes 6–12: One tense focus

Pick one high-value area:

Write or say 8–10 original sentences.

Example set:

Minutes 13–17: Error correction loop

Take 5 sentences you got wrong earlier and fix them from memory.

This matters. Correction is not enough. You must re-produce the correct form. In VerbPal, this is one of the biggest advantages of active drills: missed forms come back until they stop being weak.

Minutes 18–20: Spoken pressure round

Answer one DELF-style prompt aloud for two minutes:

Try to include:

This is exactly the kind of routine we designed VerbPal to support. Our drills are built for self-directed adult learners who want fluent production, not just gamified streaks. And yes, Lexi pops up during drill sessions with quick reminders when a pattern keeps tripping you up.

Put it into practice

If you’re preparing for DELF B2, don’t just “cover grammar.” Drill the exact verb forms you’ll need to produce in speaking and writing. In VerbPal, you can train common French verbs across the tenses that matter most — including irregulars, reflexives, conditional, and subjunctive — with active recall and spaced repetition built in.

Try VerbPal free →

The mistakes that keep B2 learners stuck

A lot of DELF B2 frustration comes from a few predictable errors.

Studying too many verbs too early

If you keep adding new verbs without stabilising core ones, your system stays fragile. B2 rewards control, not collection.

Knowing rules but not triggers

Many learners “know” the subjunctive but miss the trigger in real time.

Wrong: Il faut que je vais. (I have to go.)

Right: Il faut que j’y aille. (I have to go there.)

Wrong: Bien que c’est difficile… (Although it is difficult…)

Right: Bien que ce soit difficile… (Although it is difficult…)

Ignoring irregular high-frequency verbs

The verbs that cause the most trouble are often the ones you need most:

You can look up any tricky paradigm in our French conjugation tables or go directly to a target verb like Conjugate aller in French. Then bring that weak form back into active practice in VerbPal until it becomes automatic.

Overfocusing on written perfection and undertraining speech

DELF B2 includes oral production. If you only write forms and never say them, retrieval stays slower and less flexible.

Treating correction as learning

Seeing the right answer is not the same as owning it. You need another retrieval attempt after correction.

Which sentence is correct for DELF B2-level French: Il faut que nous faisons plus d'efforts or Il faut que nous fassions plus d'efforts?

Il faut que nous fassions plus d'efforts is correct. Il faut que triggers the subjunctive, so faire becomes que nous fassions. This is exactly the kind of high-frequency pattern you should overlearn for the exam.

Pro Tip: Track your mistakes by pattern, not by page number. “Subjunctive after il faut que” is a trainable weakness. “Chapter 12” is not.

How to know you’re actually ready for DELF B2 verbs

You are not ready because you finished a grammar book. You’re ready when you can do these things consistently:

A strong self-test is this:

The 5-part B2 verb check

Can you produce, without notes:

  1. a short opinion using penser, croire, or trouver
  2. a recommendation using il faut que or il est important que
  3. a hypothesis using si + imparfait + conditionnel
  4. a short past narrative using imparfait and passé composé
  5. a regret or preference using the conditional

Sample answers:

Je pense que le télétravail offre plus de flexibilité. (I think remote work offers more flexibility.)

Il faut que les entreprises prennent en compte la santé mentale. (Companies must take mental health into account.)

Si j’avais le choix, je travaillerais à distance trois jours par semaine. (If I had the choice, I would work remotely three days a week.)

Quand j’étais étudiant, je travaillais le week-end, mais j’ai arrêté en 2022. (When I was a student, I used to work on weekends, but I stopped in 2022.)

J’aimerais que ce système soit plus simple. (I’d like this system to be simpler.)

If these forms still feel unstable, that’s not a reason to panic. It’s a reason to drill smarter. Our recommendation is simple: use VerbPal as your training base, then support it with targeted reading, listening, and DELF-style speaking prompts. If you want a structured way to keep weak forms in rotation, our iOS and Android app is built for exactly that.

Pro Tip: Readiness means speed plus accuracy. If you can eventually find the form, keep training. If you can produce it on demand, you’re close.

Final answer: the best way to learn French verbs for the DELF B2

The best way to learn French verbs for the DELF B2 is to train for production, not recognition. Focus on high-frequency verbs. Prioritise the tenses and structures that B2 actually uses: present, past contrast, future, conditional, subjunctive, and common complex forms. Drill them in sentence frames. Revisit them with spaced repetition. Speak them out loud.

That’s the method that transfers to the exam.

And that’s exactly what we built VerbPal for: self-directed adult learners who want real fluency and reliable verb production across major tenses, irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive. If DELF B2 is your target, make your prep specific. Your verbs should feel ready before test day, not merely familiar.

Put it into practice

If this article helped you spot the gap between “I know the rule” and “I can say it fast,” the next step is simple: train the exact verbs and sentence frames DELF B2 keeps demanding. VerbPal closes that gap with active recall drills, spaced repetition, and high-frequency French verb practice built for real speaking and writing.

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FAQ

Do I need to know every French tense for DELF B2?

No. You need solid control of the tenses and moods that appear most in real B2 communication: present, passé composé, imparfait, future, conditional, and common subjunctive use.

Is the subjunctive required for DELF B2?

Yes, in practice. You may not need it in every answer, but B2-level speaking and writing often call for structures like il faut que (it is necessary that), bien que (although), and il est important que (it is important that).

How many French verbs should I learn for DELF B2?

Focus first on 30–50 high-frequency verbs used across multiple tenses and structures. That gives you far more value than memorising long lists of low-frequency verbs.

Should I memorise full conjugation tables?

Use them as reference, not as your main training tool. For DELF B2, active recall and sentence production matter much more than passive table review.

What’s the fastest way to improve DELF B2 verb accuracy?

Drill a small set of high-frequency verbs daily with active recall, spoken production, and spaced repetition. At VerbPal, that means retrieving the forms yourself, then letting our SM-2 review system bring them back before they fade.

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