Difference between revisions of "Language/French/Grammar/Demonstrative-determiners"

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!English
!English
|-
|-
|cet homme
|<u>cet</u> '''h'''omme
|this man
|this man
|-
|-
|cet ancien artisan
|<u>cet</u> '''a'''ncien artisan
|that old craftsman
|that old craftsman
|-
|-
|cet '''h'''éroïsme
|<u>cet</u> '''h'''éroïsme
|that heroism
|that heroism
|}
|}
When you add an adjective in front of the noun and if this adjective does not start with a vowel or a silent h, it is "ce" which must be used again.
When you add an adjective in front of the noun and if this adjective does not start with a vowel or a silent h, it is "ce" which must be used again.
*cet homme -> ce vieil homme
*<u>cet</u> '''h'''omme -> <u>ce</u> '''v'''ieil homme
<blockquote>this man -> this old man</blockquote>
<blockquote>this man -> this old man</blockquote>
*cet artisan -> ce jeune artisan
*<u>cet</u> '''a'''rtisan -> <u>ce</u> '''j'''eune artisan
<blockquote>this craftsman -> this young craftsman</blockquote>
<blockquote>this craftsman -> this young craftsman</blockquote>
*ce discours -> cet accablant discours
*<u>ce</u> '''d'''iscours -> <u>cet</u> '''a'''ccablant discours
<blockquote>this  speech -> this  overwhelming speech</blockquote>
<blockquote>this  speech -> this  overwhelming speech</blockquote>



Revision as of 16:07, 6 December 2021

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French Grammar - Demonstrative determiners

[CHANGED]

Definition: Demonstrative Determiners

The demonstrative determiner makes it possible to show in a precise way the thing, the person or the animal of which one speaks or which one spoke previously. It varies with the gender and number of the name it qualifies.

masculine singular feminine singular plural
ce, cette cette ces

Note

There are also forms composed with -ci or -là :

We use -ci to express proximity in time or space and -là for distance:

  • Singular masculine: ce ...-là, ce ...-ci, cet ...-ci, cet ...-là
  • Singular feminine: cette ...-ci, cette ...-là
  • Plural: ces...-ci, ces...-là.

Examples

  • Cet homme-ci est marié avec cette femme-.

This man here is married that woman there.

  • Ces enfants- sont très sages.

These children there are very wise.

Note

When the determinant precedes a noun (or an adjective qualifying this noun) which begins with a vowel or a silent h ('h muet' in French), we must use cet instead of ce.

French English
cet homme this man
cet ancien artisan that old craftsman
cet héroïsme that heroism

When you add an adjective in front of the noun and if this adjective does not start with a vowel or a silent h, it is "ce" which must be used again.

  • cet homme -> ce vieil homme

this man -> this old man

  • cet artisan -> ce jeune artisan

this craftsman -> this young craftsman

  • ce discours -> cet accablant discours

this  speech -> this  overwhelming speech

Summary table: Demonstrative Determiners

Proximate Non-proximate
masc ce, cet ce, cet ... ci ce, cet ... là

this, that

this ... (here)

that ... (there)

fern cette cette ... ci cette ... là

this, that

this ... (here)

that... (there)

plur ces ces ... ci ces ... là

these, those

these ... (here)

those ... (there)

Other chapters

Table of Contents

Nouns


Determiners


Personal and impersonal pronouns


Adjectives


Adverbs


Numbers, measurements, time and quantifiers


Verb forms


Verb constructions


Verb and participle agreement


Tense


The subjunctive, modal verbs, exclamatives and imperatives


The infinitive


Prepositions


Question formation


Relative clauses


Negation


Conjunctions and other linking constructions