Paraître Présent

Paraître Présent

Paraître Présent

In this post, The French Verb “Paraître Présent”  Easy Guide with Examples, you will learn more about the verb  “paraître” that means “to appear”,“to seem”, or sometimes “to be published.”

This verb describes how someone looks, how something seems, or when something comes out (like a book or a magazine).

Examples:

French English
Elle paraît triste. She appears sad.
Ça paraît difficile. That seems hard.
Le livre paraît demain. The book comes out tomorrow.

Present tense conjugation: To seem

French English
Je parais I seem
Tu parais You seem (sing.)
Il paraît He seems
Elle paraît She seems
Nous paraissons We seem
Vous paraissez You seem (plur.)
Ils paraissent They seem (masc.)
Elles paraissent They seem ( fem.)

Examples:

French English
Je parais
Je parais fatigué.
I seem tired.
Tu parais
Tu parais nerveux.
You look nervous.
Il paraît
Il paraît content.
He seems happy.
Elle paraît
Elle paraît fatiguée.
She seems tired.
Nous paraissons
Nous paraissons confiants.
We seem confident.
Vous paraissez
Vous paraissez sérieux.
You look serious.
Ils paraissent
Ils paraissent calmes.
They seem calm.
EIles paraissent
Elles paraissent énergiques.
They seem energetic.

Tip:

When you can replace, “paraître” with “sembler”
or “avoir l’air,” it’s often correct!
Think of this verb as the “appearance verb.” It’s like a mirror. It doesn’t change who you are, it just shows how you look to others!

être is for who you are
paraître is for how you look

Common Expressions with this verb

Here are a few expressions native speakers use all the time.

1. Il paraît que…
It seems that… / Apparently…
Example:
Il paraît qu’il va pleuvoir.
Apparently, it’s going to rain.

2. Faire paraître
Example:
to publish or release
Elle fait paraître un article chaque semaine.
She publishes an article every week.

3. Sans paraître
without showing
Example:
Il écoute sans paraître intéressé.
He listens without seeming interested.

Paraître in Different Tenses

Let’s see how this verb works in the past, imperfect, and future — so you can use it in any conversation.

Passé Composé (something that happened once)
Le magazine est paru hier. → The magazine was published yesterday.
Elle a paru surprise. → She seemed surprised.

Imparfait (something continuous or habitual in the past)
Il paraissait triste chaque matin. → He used to seem sad every morning.
Les enfants paraissaient heureux ensemble. → The children seemed happy together.

Futur Simple (what will happen)
Le nouveau livre paraîtra demain. → The new book will be published tomorrow.
Ça paraîtra étrange au début. → It will seem strange at first.

Do you see how easy it is? Once you know the pattern, you can use it everywhere!

Now is your turn:
Comment below a sentence using this verb and don’t forget to like, subscribe, and share this with your French-learning friends!

See you next time ! Et n’oublie pas de paraître confiant quand tu parles français !

Do you want to practice more French verbs in present tense? Click on the image of your interest:

Paraître Présent