Bonjour !
Exemple : Léa et Matthieu descendent à l'arrêt de bus.
<em>a) Axel (attendre) "attendent le" métro.</em>
<em>b) Nous (monter) "montons dans le " tramway.</em>
<em>c) Je (monter) "monte en "voiture.</em>
<em>d) Jessica et Sarah (descendre) "descendent du " train.</em>
<em>e) Vous (prendre) "prenez l' avion ?"</em>
<em>f) Tu (descendre) "descends à l' arrêt du car.</em>
Hi,
<u>Choisissez </u><u>la </u><u>bonne </u><u>forme </u><u>du </u><u>verbe.</u>
→ David vient avec nous.
→ Venez ici, Isabelle et Aurélie!
<em><u>Venir </u></em><em><u>au </u></em><em><u>présent</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>de </u></em><em><u>l'indicatif</u></em><em><u> :</u></em>
Je viens
tu viens
il vient
nous venons
vous venez
ils viennent
<em><u>Venir,</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>à </u></em><em><u>l'impératif</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>présent</u></em><em><u> :</u></em>
ø
Viens
ø
Venons
Venez
ø
✅(•‿•)
The easiest way to determine masculine and feminine nouns is to look at the pronoun before it. If the noun is masculine, there will be a "le" or "un" and if it's feminine there will be a "la" or "une", but if it's plural, there will be a "les" or "des", or of it starts with a vowel, there could be a "l' ".
When the noun is plural or starts with a vowel, it is a lot harder to tell, so you have to look at the word. In general (there are always exceptions), if a word ends with -que, -ée, or -elle, it is feminine.
Just a note, there are a lot more masculine words than feminine, so if you really can't figure out which it is, I would defer to the masculine.
Hope this helps :)