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Adjectifs démonstratifs
Demonstrative adjectives (this, that) are used to indicate a specific noun or nouns. In French, they must agree with the noun(s) in number and sometimes gender.
Par exemple…
| Cet arbre est mignon. | This tree is cute. | |
| Ces montagnes sont hautes. | Those mountains are tall. |
Characteristics of demonstrative adjectives
- Used in place of an article, not with one
- Placed directly in front of a noun or an adjective + noun
- Agree with the demonstrated noun in number and sometimes gender
- Demonstrative adjective + noun can be replaced by a demonstrative pronoun
French demonstrative adjectives
| this / that | these / those | |||
| masculine | ce | ces | ||
| masc + vowel | cet | ces | ||
| feminine | cette | ces |
+ There are three singular adjectives:
- Masculine: ce
- Masculine in front of a vowel: cet
- Feminine: cette
+ When a singular demonstrative adjective precedes a masculine noun or adjective that begins with a vowel or h muet, cet is used to avoid a hiatus – learn more.
Par exemple…
| cet homme | this/that man | ||
| cet ancien château | this/that former château |
+ There is only one plural demonstrative adjective: ces.
Cettes does not exist, and neither does cets.
Par exemple…
| ces femmes | these/those women |
| ces hommes | these/those men |
French vs English
French demonstrative adjectives make no distinction between "this" and "that" – ce, cet, and cette can each mean either one. Likewise, ces can mean "these" or "those." When you need to make the distinction, you can attach a suffix to the noun:
Par exemple…
| cette chaise-ci | this chair | |
| ces chaises-là | those chairs | |
| Je vais à cet hôtel-ci, pas à cette maison-là. | I’m going to this hotel, not that house. |
Demonstrative Adjective Quizzes
Think you’ve got it? Test yourself on French demonstrative adjectives with these fill-in-the-blanks exercises:
Note: You must be logged into your Progress with Lawless French account to take these tests. If you don’t have one, sign up – it’s free!
Related lessons
- Suffix –ci
- Suffix –là
- Introduction to nouns and gender
- Introduction to adjectives
- Demonstrative pronouns
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Verb conjugation tables for more than 1,600 French verbs in all the simple and compound tenses and moods.
In English, we say that the vowels are “a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes y.” The last couple of words hint at one of the keys to understanding pronunciation: a vowel is not so much a letter as the sound represented by a letter or combination of letters.
