👉 Visit my lessons on plus and davantage — both mean “more” »👉 Visit this lesson to learn autant, meaning “as much” » How to make comparisons and express “the best, the worst, etc.” in French The French comparative is used for making comparisons. For example, “Je suis plus grand que vous” (I am taller …
French Grammar
French demonstrative adjectives are ce, cet, ces and cette and translate to this and these. French demonstrative pronouns are celui, celle, ceux and celles and translate into both “the one” and “the ones”. This page offers a complete beginners guide to French demonstrative adjectives and pronouns with example sentences. French demonstrative adjectives French demonstrative adjectives: …
French interrogative pronouns qui and que In French the interrogative pronoun qui means who and que means what. There are lots of ways of using qui and que to ask questions and the structures can be a bit tricky. A key underlying rule is “qui + verb” and “que + subject pronoun”. This will play …
In French, the interrogative adjectives quel, quelle, quels, quelles mean “which?” or “what?”. They must agree in number and gender with the nouns they modify. The French interrogative pronouns lequel, laquelle, lesquels and lesquelles mean “which one?” and “which ones?”. This page will cover both French interrogative adjectives and pronouns in detail. French Interrogative Adjectives …
👉 See also: moi (Word of the Day lesson) » Stressed pronouns, also called disjunctive or emphatic pronouns, are used to provide emphasis of a personal pronoun that refers to a person or group of people. The French stressed pronouns are: moi (me), toi (you), lui (him), elle (her), nous (us), vous (you), eux (them) …




