Activities for Aimer à mort

Published by Lyrical Language on

Practice some of the vocabulary from this song and its reflexive pronouns using these flashcards, games and exercises.

Did you miss the analysis for this song? Find it here!

Activities

Vocabulary Excercises

We have chosen 15 terms out of this song’s lyrics to form our vocabulary list, which can be found below. You can use the following activities to learn and practice this vocabulary.

Vocabulary Flashcards – Learn the vocabulary from this song with our sets of French to English and English to French flashcards, then test yourself with our interactive flashcards.

Vocabulary Games – Practice the vocabulary for this song using our memory and matching games and our word search puzzle.

Vocabulary Exercises – Fill in the missing vocabulary with drag and drop and fill in the blanks exercises.

Grammar Exercises

This song left next to nothing to practice grammatically. As there are several reflexive verbs we’ll practice the reflexive pronouns. Charts of these pronouns can be found below. Note that several uses of the reflexive in this song are reciprocal.

You can use the following activities to learn and practice these pronouns.

Reflexive Pronoun Flashcards – Practice the object pronouns in this song with our sets of French to English and English to French flashcards, then test yourself with our interactive flashcards.

Reflexive Pronoun Games – Practice the object pronouns in this song using our memory and matching games.

Reflexive Pronoun Exercises – Practice the object pronouns in this song using our drag and drop, fill in, and highlighting exercises.

Resources

Vocabulary List

TermMeaningP of SContext
avoir peurto be afraidavoir peur, ai peur
avoir tortto be wrongai tort
casserbreak, break open, crack, shatter; get on s.o’s case, offendreg verbcasser
craindrebe afraid/scared of; be worried/concerned aboutirreg verbcraindre
espoirhopemasc nounespoir
face àfacing, in front of; faced withface aux
foistimefem nounfois
perdre du tempswaste timeperdre son temps
perdre le filto lose trackperdre le fil
respirerto breathe, inhale; ooze, display, exudereg verbrespirer
s’endormirto fall asleep, go to sleepirreg verbs’endort
se reprendreto pull oneself together, get a grip on oneself, get back on one’s feet; correct oneselfirreg verbnous reprendre
sommeilsleep; sleepiness; inactivity, dormancymasc nounsommeil
soufflebreath; breeze, puff of wind, blast of airmasc nounsouffle
toucherto touch, feel; to reach; to touch, move, affect deeplyreg verbtoucher

Reflexive Pronouns

Reflexive verbs can be conjugated in any tense/mood. As the action reflects back on the subject, a reflexive pronoun accompanies the verb in all tenses. The following charts show these pronouns.

SingularPlural
1st personme (m’) – myselfnous – ourselves
2nd personte (t’) – yourselfvous – yourself / yourselves
3rd personse (s’) – himself, herselfse (s’) – themselves

The reflexive pronoun can also have a reciprocal meaning of ‘each other’. For example while ‘on se parle’ could mean ‘we are talking to ourselves’, it is much more likely to mean ‘we are talking to each other’.