Difference between revisions of "Language/French/Grammar/Form-of-the-article-with-adjectives-and-nouns-beginning-with-a-vowel-or-an-h"

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<div style="font-size:300%"> French Grammar - Form of the article with adjectives and nouns beginning with a vowel or an h</div>
<div style="font-size:300%"> French Grammar - Form of the article with adjectives and nouns beginning with a vowel or an h</div>


le and la are shortened to Y, and du and de la become de V if they immediately precede an adjective or noun beginning with a vowel:




''le'' and ''la'' are shortened to Y, and du and de la become de V if they immediately precede an adjective or noun beginning with a vowel:


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They also behave in the same way when they immediately precede an adjective or noun beginning with a so-called 'silent h' or h muet. This is a written h which has no counterpart in the spoken language:




They also behave in the same way when they immediately precede an adjective or noun beginning with a so-called 'silent h' or h muet. This is a written h which has no counterpart in the spoken language:


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There is also another set of adjectives and nouns beginning with a written h which do have a counterpart in the spoken language. This is misleadingly called an 'aspirate h' or h aspiré. It is misleading because there is no 'h' sound in spoken French. Rather, words which begin with an 'aspirate h' in written French also happen to block reduction of the article to /' or de V in spoken French:








There is also another set of adjectives and nouns beginning with a written h which do have a counterpart in the spoken language. This is misleadingly called an 'aspirate h' or h aspiré. It is misleading because there is no 'h' sound in spoken French. Rather, words which begin with an 'aspirate h' in written French also happen to block reduction of the article to /' or de V in spoken French:
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There is no easy way to distinguish adjectives and nouns which begin with a silent h from those which begin with an aspirate h. Some cases are idiosyncratic. For example, héros 'hero' does not allow contraction of the article: le héros; but héroïne 'heroine or heroin' and héroïsme 'heroism' do: l'héroïne, l'héroïsme.




Many dictionaries indicate an aspirate h by putting ['] at the beginning of the phonetic transcription of the word.


There is no easy way to distinguish adjectives and nouns which begin with a silent h from those which begin with an aspirate h. Some cases are idiosyncratic. For example, héros 'hero' does not allow contraction of the article: le héros; but héroïne 'heroine or heroin' and héroïsme 'heroism' do: l'héroïne, l'héroïsme.


For example:




Many dictionaries indicate an aspirate h by putting ['] at the beginning of the phonetic transcription of the word.




For example:


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The final consonant of les and des is pronounced [z] when they immediately precede an adjective or a noun beginning with a vowel or a silent h:






The final consonant of les and des is pronounced [z] when they immediately precede an adjective or a noun beginning with a vowel or a silent h:
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The final n of un is pronounced when un immediately precedes an adjective or
noun beginning with a vowel or silent h, but not otherwise:








The final n of un is pronounced when un immediately precedes an adjective or
noun beginning with a vowel or silent h, but not otherwise:


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Revision as of 09:10, 15 October 2021

French-Language-PolyglotClub.png
French Grammar - Form of the article with adjectives and nouns beginning with a vowel or an h


le and la are shortened to Y, and du and de la become de V if they immediately precede an adjective or noun beginning with a vowel:

French English
l'univers (m) the universe
l'électricité (f) electricity
de l'acier (m) steel
de l'eau (f) water
l'ancien régime (m) the Ancien Regime



They also behave in the same way when they immediately precede an adjective or noun beginning with a so-called 'silent h' or h muet. This is a written h which has no counterpart in the spoken language:

French English
l'hiver (m) winter
l'histoire (f) history
de l'héroïsme (m) heroism
de l'herbe (f) grass
l'horrible silence (m) the terrible silence



There is also another set of adjectives and nouns beginning with a written h which do have a counterpart in the spoken language. This is misleadingly called an 'aspirate h' or h aspiré. It is misleading because there is no 'h' sound in spoken French. Rather, words which begin with an 'aspirate h' in written French also happen to block reduction of the article to /' or de V in spoken French:

French English
le hibou (m)  the owl
la haine (f)  hate
du hachis (m) minced beef
de la honte shame
la haute montagne high up in the mountains



There is no easy way to distinguish adjectives and nouns which begin with a silent h from those which begin with an aspirate h. Some cases are idiosyncratic. For example, héros 'hero' does not allow contraction of the article: le héros; but héroïne 'heroine or heroin' and héroïsme 'heroism' do: l'héroïne, l'héroïsme.


Many dictionaries indicate an aspirate h by putting ['] at the beginning of the phonetic transcription of the word.


For example:

French English
hibou ['ibu] (m)  owl
histoire [istwar] (f)  story, history


The final consonant of les and des is pronounced [z] when they immediately precede an adjective or a noun beginning with a vowel or a silent h:

French English French English
les [z] enfants children BUT les hérissons hedgehogs
des [z] amis friends BUT des haricots beans
des [z] héroïnes heroines BUT des héros heroes



The final n of un is pronounced when un immediately precedes an adjective or noun beginning with a vowel or silent h, but not otherwise:

French English French English
un [n] hôtel a hotel BUT un homard a lobster
un [n] honnête home a decent man BUT un haut fonctionnaire a senior civil servant



NB: Verbs beginning with an h in the written language also divide into those which require contraction of je, me, le, la, ne, etc., and those which do not:


  • J'habite Londres

I live in London


  • Je l'héberge

I am letting him stay with me


  • Je hais Londres

I hate London


  • Je la heurte dans son orgueil

I hurt her pride