Verbe régulierNiveau C1

TO HATE

haïr

Past participle: hated
Present participle: hating

Present Simple

Ihate
Youhate
He/She/Ithates
Wehate
You (pl.)hate
Theyhate

Present Continuous

Iam hating
Youare hating
He/She/Itis hating
Weare hating
You (pl.)are hating
Theyare hating

Past Simple

Ihated
Youhated
He/She/Ithated
Wehated
You (pl.)hated
Theyhated

Past Continuous

Iwas hating
Youwere hating
He/She/Itwas hating
Wewere hating
You (pl.)were hating
Theywere hating

Present Perfect

Ihave hated
Youhave hated
He/She/Ithas hated
Wehave hated
You (pl.)have hated
Theyhave hated

Past Perfect

Ihad hated
Youhad hated
He/She/Ithad hated
Wehad hated
You (pl.)had hated
Theyhad hated

Future (will)

Iwill hate
Youwill hate
He/She/Itwill hate
Wewill hate
You (pl.)will hate
Theywill hate

Future (going to)

Iam going to hate
Youare going to hate
He/She/Itis going to hate
Weare going to hate
You (pl.)are going to hate
Theyare going to hate

Conditional

Iwould hate
Youwould hate
He/She/Itwould hate
Wewould hate
You (pl.)would hate
Theywould hate

Exemples

  • I hate injustice.
  • She is hating this new job.
  • They have always hated broccoli.

À propos du verbe "hate"

Le verbe anglais "to hate" signifie "haïr" en français. C'est un verbe régulier qui se conjugue en ajoutant -ed au passé : "hated".

Ce verbe est de niveau C1 selon le CECRL (Cadre Européen Commun de Référence pour les Langues). Son participe présent est "hating", utilisé pour former les temps continus (continuous tenses).

Pour maîtriser la conjugaison de "hate", entraînez-vous avec les différents temps présentés ci-dessus. Le Present Simple et le Past Simple sont les temps les plus couramment utilisés en anglais au quotidien.

EdTech AI