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3.1 Rooms and Furniture 3.2 French Adjectives 3.3 The Position of Adjectives in a Sentence 3.4 The Comparative
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3.5 The Superlative 3.6 Possessive Adjectives 3.7 Mise En Pratique
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3.1 Rooms and Furniture
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La famille Legendre habite dans une maison. Il y a une cuisine, un salon, quatre chambres, deux salles de bains et un bureau.
SLIDE 6 Dans la cuisine, il y a une table et des
il y a un fauteuil, une étagère et une lampe.
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Une maison A house/ home Une table A table Un appartement An apartment Une chaise A chair Un salon A living room Un fauteuil A couch Une cuisine A kitchen Une lampe A lamp Une salle de bains A bathroom Un placard A cupboard Une chambre A bedroom Un lit A bed
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Un bureau An office Un balcon A balcony Une pièce A room Un jardin A garden Un sous-sol A basement Un toit A roof Un couloir A hallway Des escaliers Stairs Un frigo A fridge Une cuisinière A stove
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3.2 French Adjectives
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Dans la cuisine, il y a une grande table, des placards blancs, un joli frigo et des lampes anciennes.
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For regular adjectives, you add an ‘-e’ to the masculine form of the adjective to form the feminine: Grand - Grande Une grande table
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adjectives: Petit - Petite (small) Une petite maison Joli - Jolie (nice/pretty) Une jolie cuisine
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Masculine adjectives that end with an ‘-e’ do not take an additional ‘-e’ at the feminine. Their spelling remains unchanged:
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Triste Sad Vide Empty Sympathique Friendly Sale Dirty Confortable Comfortable Propre Clean Facile Easy Maigre Thin Drôle Funny Moderne Modern Difficile Difficult Calme Calm
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There are quite a few exceptions to that rule, and the following table will offer you a list of the most common feminine endings for irregular adjectives:
SLIDE 16 Masculine (ending) Feminine (ending) Examples
cher/chère (expensive)
faux/fausse (false/wrong)
vieux/vieille (old)
neuf/neuve (new)
long/longue (long)
SLIDE 17 Masculine (ending) Feminine (ending) Examples
mou/molle (soft) ; fou/folle (crazy)
beau/belle (nice/pretty); nouveau/ nouvelle (new)
doux/douce (soft); roux/rousse (red
blanc/blanche (white); sec/sèche (dry)
heureux/heureuse (happy)
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For most adjectives, the plural is formed by adding an ‘-s’ to the singular (for masculine and feminine form): Des placards blancs (masculine plural) Des lampes anciennes (feminine plural)
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This rule also applies to adjectives with an irregular feminine form: Blanc Blanche Blanches
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adjectives ending with an ‘-s’ or an ‘-x’ at the singular will not take an ‘-s’ at the plural. Their spelling remains unchanged:
Exceptions
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Gros Big/Fat Faux False/ Wrong Heureux Happy Joyeux Happy Frais Fresh Délicieux Delicious Doux Soft
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in ‘-al’ at the masculine singular will usually end in ‘- aux’ at the plural. These adjectives are regular at the feminine plural, though:
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Masculine singular Masculine plural Feminine plural Général Généraux Générales Principal Principaux Principales International Internationaux Internationales
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ending in ‘-al’ at the masculine singular will take an ‘-s’ at the plural, instead of ‘- aux’:
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Masculine singular Masculine plural Examples Banal (banal) Banals Des hommes banals Fatal (fatal) Fatals Des changements (changes) fatals Glacial (very cold) Glacials Des vents (winds) glacials Natal (home) Natals Les pays natals (native countries)
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adjectives remains invariable at the feminine and the plural:
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Marron (brown) Des chaises marron (brown chairs). Orange Une table orange. Snob (snobbish) Des personnes snob (snobbish people). Bon marché (cheap) Une cuisinière bon marché (a cheap stove). Sympa (nice) Une amie sympa (a nice girlfriend).
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3.3 The Position of Adjectives in a Sentence
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Unlike in English, the majority of French adjectives are placed after the noun they qualify: Des placards blancs Des lampes anciennes
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A limited number of adjectives is placed before the noun. It is important to know them, as they are very common in French. The following table introduces you to these adjectives: Exceptions
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grand/grande (tall/big) Une grande maison (a big house) bon/bonne (good) Un bon ami (a good friend) jeune (young) Une jeune femme (a young woman) petit/petite (small) Une petite cuisine (a small kitchen)
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beau/belle/bel* (nice/pretty) Un beau salon (a nice living room) joli/jolie (nice/pretty) Une jolie chambre (a nice bedroom) vieux/vieille/vieil* (old) Une vieille lampe (an old lamp) mauvais/mauvaise (bad) Un mauvais film (a bad movie)
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autre (other) L’autre jour (the other day) nouveau/ nouvelle/nouvel* (new) (new) Un nouveau fauteuil (a new couch) gros/grosse (big/fat) Un gros gâteau (a big cake) faux/fausse (wrong/fake) Un faux numéro (a wrong number)
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The adjectives beau, nouveau and vieux will undergo a spelling change when used with a noun that: (a) is singular (b) is masculine (c) starts with a vowel or a silent ‘-h’
SLIDE 35 An old man: Un vieux homme Un vieil homme A new computer: Un nouvel
A nice apartment: Un bel appartement
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- a. Placed after the noun
- No specific order.
- Use the connector et (‘and’)
between adjectives. Une maison rouge et blanche (a red and white house). OR Une maison blanche et rouge.
When you have two adjectives…
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- b. Placed before the noun
- Order to respect
- Use the acronym B.A.G.S to remember the order:
B(eauty) A(ge) G(oodness) S(ize) A nice little car Une jolie petite voiture.
- Do not use et between adjectives.
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3.4 The Comparative
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Yvan est plus grand que sa fille.
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When making comparisons with adjectives, plus, moins or aussi is placed before the adjective, and que/qu’ is placed after. plus/moins/aussi + adjective + que Plus More Moins Less Aussi As…as
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agrees in gender and number with the noun: La première maison est plus petite que la deuxième (the first house is smaller than the second one).
and aussi are invariable.
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There are two exceptions to the rule: the adjectives bon (‘good’) and mauvais (‘bad’) change spelling when used with plus…que: Plus Moins Aussi Bon Meilleur.e.s que Moins bon.ne.s que Aussi bon.ne.s que Mauvais Pire que Moins mauvais.e.s que Aussi mauvais.e.s que
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Elle est meilleure que sa soeur en français (she’s better at French than her sister). Elle est aussi bonne que sa soeur en mathématiques (she’s as good as her sister at maths).
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Il est pire que son frère en sport (he’s worse than his brother at sport).
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3.5 The Superlative
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Yvan est le plus grand de la famille Legendre.
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superlative with adjectives, you will use the expressions le plus (‘the most’) or le moins (‘the least’).
the superlative can’t be used to express equality; consequently the expression le aussi doesn’t exist!
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moins are invariable, but the article you place in front of them (le) will change, based on the gender and number of the noun.
(‘good’) and mauvais (‘bad’) also have irregular superlatives.
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Masculine Feminine Singular Le plus/ Le moins La plus/ La moins Plural Les plus/ Les moins Les plus/ Les moins
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Masculine (singular/ plural) Feminine (singular/ plural) Bon Le meilleur/ Les meilleurs La meilleure/ Les meilleures Mauvais Le pire/ Les pires La pire/ Les pires
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3.6 Possessive Adjectives
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Ma mère s’appelle Sylvie, elle est plus jeune (younger) que mon père. Mon père s’appelle Yvan, il est le plus grand de la famille. Mes parents sont très gentils (nice). Ma soeur s’appelle Anna, elle est moins sage (well-behaved) que moi. Je m’appelle Julien, et j’adore ma famille!
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- Possessive adjectives agree in gender and
number with the noun they qualify what matters is not the gender of the person who speaks, but the gender/number of the noun that comes after the adjective. Ma mère s’appelle Sylvie […] Ma soeur s’appelle
- Anna. It’s a boy talking (Julien), but his gender
doesn’t impact on the choice of the possessive
- adjective. Mère and soeur are both feminine
words, which is why we use the adjective ma.
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Subject English Masculine Feminine Je (I) My Mon/Mes Ma/Mes Tu (you) Your Ton/Tes Ta/Tes Il/Elle (he/she) Their Son/Ses Sa/Ses Nous (we) Our Notre/Nos Notre/Nos Vous (you - plural or formal) Your Votre/Vos Votre/Vos Ils/Elles (they) Their Leur/Leurs Leur/Leurs
SLIDE 55 Let’s observe the differences between English and French, when it comes to choosing the correct possessive adjective: Jenny: My computer Aline: Mon ordinateur In French, you need to know the gender and number
- f the word ordinateur (masculine and singular) in order
to choose the correct possessive adjective. The fact that the person speaking is a woman doesn’t impact on your choice of adjective.
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Jenny and Marc: Our dog Aline and Pierre: Notre chien Although there are two people talking, the noun chien is singular (no ‘-s’ at the end), which is why you will use the singular notre (and not nos).
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Make sure to distinguish between ses and leurs: His friends Ses ami(e)s Their friends Leurs ami(e)s Her dog Son chien Their dog Leur chien
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When a feminine word starts with a VOWEL or a mute H, you won’t use “ma, ta, sa” BUT “mon, ton, son” (the masculine form) for a reason of pronunciation: My (girl)friend: Ma amie Mon amie Your school: Ta école Ton école Only at the singular, not the plural of feminine words: Your (girl)friends: Tes amies
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3.7 Mise En Pratique
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- 1. Find the feminine of the
following adjectives, based on their ending: Masculine Feminine Cher Nouveau Blanc Heureux Propre
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- 2. Decide on the masculine plural
- f the following adjectives, based
- n their ending at the singular:
Masculine singular Masculine plural Gros International Fatal Frais Grand
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- 3. From the list of adjectives below, say which ones are
placed before the noun: Before the noun After the noun Grand Rouge Nouveau Français Joli Rond (round- shaped)
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- 4. Use the following words
to write complete sentences, using the comparative (don’t forget to make all the necessary agreements): ex: Elle/plus/grand/sa soeur Elle est plus grande que sa soeur
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- a. Nous/moins/sportif/mes amis
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- b. Elle/aussi/beau/sa soeur
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- c. Vous/plus/bon/moi/en français
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- d. Je/plus/mauvais/ma soeur/en maths
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- 5. Use the following words to write complete
sentences, using the superlative: (don’t forget to make all the necessary agreements):
- a. Il/grand/dans sa famille (superlatif +)
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- b. Elle/mauvais/en maths (superlatif -)
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- c. Nous/bon/en sport (superlatif -)
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- 6. Translate the following sentences by using the
correct possessive adjective: Ex: ‘My dog’ / Chien (masc. sing.) Mon chien
- a. ‘Our house’ / Maison (fem. sing.)
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- b. ‘My father’ / Père (masc. sing.)
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- c. ‘Their car’ / Voiture (fem. sing.)
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- d. ‘Your clothes’ / Vêtements (masc. plur.)
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- e. ‘My school’ / École (fem. sing.)
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