Language/French/Grammar/How-to-use-falloir

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How to use « falloir » in French

Definitions

impersonal form

A sentence is in the impersonal form if:

  1. The subject is the word "il".
  2. The subject represents nothing and no one.

The indirect object complement

The indirect object complement (French: le complément d'objet indirect, COI) indirectly completes the verb most often through a preposition. The verb used with an COI is an indirect transitive verb.

To find the COI of the verb, it is most enough to ask questions:

  • à qui ? à quoi ? (to whom?) (to what?)
  • de qui ? de quoi ? (of who?) (of what?)

Falloir

The French verb “falloir” only exists in its impersonal form.

It may be followed by a noun, by an infinitive, by a clause - with the verb in the subjunctive - and it may be preceded by a pronoun acting as indirect object:

The verb "falloir" can be followed by a noun, an infinitive, a clause (with the verb in the subjunctive) and it can be preceded by a pronoun acting as an indirect object:


French Translation
Il faut du temps  Time is needed
Il faut partir  It is time to leave
Il faut que nous partions  We must leave
Il nous faut partir  We must leave
Il nous faudra revenir dans trois semaines  We must come back in three weeks
Il a fallu trois mois pour que nous nous décidions  It took us three months to make up our minds
Il faudrait être certain que cela soit la bonne décision We need to be sure that this is the right decision

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

Contributors

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