Language/French/Grammar/ensuite-VS-puis

From Polyglot Club WIKI
< Language‎ | French‎ | Grammar
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This lesson can still be improved. EDIT IT NOW! & become VIP
Rate this lesson:
5.00
(2 votes)

French-Language-PolyglotClub.png

"Ensuite" VS "Puis" in French[edit | edit source]

Rule[edit | edit source]

"Ensuite" and "Puis" both mean 'afterwards, then'.

However, "Ensuite" is a time adverb which can occur in the middle of a clause (for the position of adverbs), while "Puis" is a coordinating conjunction which can occur only at the beginning of a clause.

Therefore "Ensuite" and "Puis" are not always interchangeable.

In grammatical terms, "Ensuite" is an adverb whereas "Puis" is a conjunction. As a conjunction, "Puis" joins sentences together. That means it cannot simply be added at the end of a sentence, which "Ensuite" can.

"Puis" is also often used for more logical (i.e. not strictly temporal) sequences.

See the examples below:

Examples[edit | edit source]

  • Il a payé l'addition, et il est ensuite parti

He paid the bill, and afterwards left

  • Qu’est-ce qu’il a fait ensuite ? works, NOT Qu’est-ce qu’il a fait puis ?

What did he do next?

  • Il a payé l'addition, puis il est parti

He paid the bill, then he left

  • Il y a beaucoup de musées à Paris, puis il y a les parcs

There are a lot of museums in Paris, then there are the parks

Other Lessons[edit | edit source]

Contributors

Maintenance script


Create a new Lesson