Language/French/Grammar/Agreement-of-past-participles-with-preceding-direct-objects-in-questions
[CHANGED]
Definitions
Subject—Verb Agreement
The subject-verb agreement in French is the way to choose the correct ending for verbs in terms of grammatical persons, gender and number, depending on their subject.
The Direct Object Complement
The direct object complement (French: le complément d'objet direct, COD) directly completes the verb without any preposition. The verb used with a COD is a direct transitive verb.
To find the COD of a verb, it is most often enough to ask questions:
- Quoi ? (What?)
Past Participle
The past participle is a verb form with several roles. It’s essential in the creation of compound verb tenses/moods and the passive voice, and it can also be used as an adjective. The French past participle usually ends -é, -i, or -u, and is equivalent to -ed or -en in English.
The past participle agrees with it in gender and number
Questions can be created in different ways. When they are constructed with the direct object before the past participle in compound tenses, the past participle agrees with it in gender and number:
- Quel disque as-tu acheté ?
Which record did you buy?
- Quelle chaise as-tu achetée ?
Which chair did you buy?
- Laquelle a-t-il choisie ?
Which one did he buy?
- Lesquels ont-ils voulus ?
Which ones did they want?
- Combien de melons as-tu achetés ?
How many melons have you bought?
- Combien de bouteilles de Champagne as-tu achetées?
How many bottles of Champagne did you buy?
Past participles of impersonal verbs
The past participles of impersonal verbs, like il y a "there is/there are", never agree with a preceding questioned complement:
- Quels remarques y a-t-il eu (NOT *eus)?
What remarks were there?
Agreement with personal use
This should be distinguished from the personal use where the agreement would take place:
- Quels remarques a-t-il eus?
What remarks did he have?
'
Other Chapters
Other Lessons
- Number differences between French and English nouns
- Adverbs ending in —amment and —eminent derived from adjectives ending in —ant or —ent
- Auxiliaries
- Object pronouns in coordinated clauses
- Position of object pronouns with devoir, pouvoir + infinitives
- Easy way of generating the imperfect tense
- "J'ai eu" or "j'avais"
- The partitive article "du", "de l'", "de la" and "des"
- Reciprocal se and cases of potential ambiguity
- Pronominal verbs and body parts
- Benefactive me, te, se, nous, vous
- Easy way of generating the present tense
- on as an equivalent for nous
- Indefinite article
- Subject verb agreement — Verb agreement with collective noun subjects