Difference between revisions of "Language/French/Grammar/“en”-when-numbers-are-direct-objects"
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==Other Chapters== | ==Other Chapters== | ||
{{French-Grammar-Course-Menu}} | {{French-Grammar-Course-Menu}} | ||
==Related Lessons== | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Inversion-of-subject-and-verb-after-some-sentence-initial-adverbs|Inversion of subject and verb after some sentence initial adverbs]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Grammatical-and-real-number|Grammatical and real number]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/“être”-and-“avoir”-with-verbs-used-intransitively-and-transitively|“être” and “avoir” with verbs used intransitively and transitively]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Verbs-whose-stems-end-in-c—-or-g—|Verbs whose stems end in c— or g—]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Use-of-on|Use of on]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Differences-in-the-use-of-numbers-in-French-and-English-Addresses|Differences in the use of numbers in French and English Addresses]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Repetition-of-the-definite-article|Repetition of the definite article]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Collective-nouns|Collective nouns]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Stressed-pronouns|Stressed pronouns]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Reflexive-pronouns|Reflexive pronouns]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Easy-way-of-generating-the-imperfect-subjunctive|Easy way of generating the imperfect subjunctive]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Adjectives-preceded-by-de|Adjectives preceded by de]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Differences-in-the-use-of-numbers-in-French-and-English-mille-milliers-milliards|Differences in the use of numbers in French and English mille milliers milliards]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/subjects-objects-pronouns|subjects objects pronouns]] | |||
* [[Language/French/Grammar/Summary-table-of-articles|Summary table of articles]] |
Revision as of 13:04, 26 February 2023
Necessity to use “en” when numbers are direct objects
Number is a direct object
The pronoun en must be inserted before the verb when a number on its own (or followed by an adjective, e.g. deux grands) is a direct object:
- J'en prends deux (grands), s'il vous plaît
I'll take two (big ones), please
- Elle lui en a offert une douzaine
She offered him a dozen
Number is a subject
This is not the case, however, when a number alone (or followed by an adjective) is a subject:
- Deux (grands) ont disparu
Two (big ones) have disappeared
- Une douzaine me suffira
A dozen will be enough for me
quantifiers
en must be similarly inserted before the verb when quantifiers like quelquesuns, plusieurs and certains stand alone as direct objects:
- J'en ai encore quelques-uns
I still have a few
- J'en ai encore plusieurs
I still have several
- J'en ai encore certains
I still have some
Other Chapters
Related Lessons
- Inversion of subject and verb after some sentence initial adverbs
- Grammatical and real number
- “être” and “avoir” with verbs used intransitively and transitively
- Verbs whose stems end in c— or g—
- Use of on
- Differences in the use of numbers in French and English Addresses
- Repetition of the definite article
- Collective nouns
- Stressed pronouns
- Reflexive pronouns
- Easy way of generating the imperfect subjunctive
- Adjectives preceded by de
- Differences in the use of numbers in French and English mille milliers milliards
- subjects objects pronouns
- Summary table of articles