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French personal pronouns

French personal pronouns (analogous to English I, you, he/she, we, and they) reflect the person and number of their referent, and in the case of the third person, its gender as well (much like the English distinction between him and her, except that French lacks an inanimate third person pronoun it or a gender neutral they and thus draws this distinction among all third person nouns, singular and plural). They also reflect the role they play in their clause: subject, direct object, indirect object, or other.

Personal pronouns display a number of grammatical particularities and complications not found in their English counterparts: some of them can only be used in certain circumstances; some of them change form depending on surrounding words; and their placement is largely unrelated to the placement of the nouns they replace.

Overview

French Personal Pronouns
Function
Number Person Subject Reflexive Direct object Indirect object Disjunctive
Singular 1st je[i] me[i] moi
2nd (informal) tu te[i] toi
2nd (formal) vous
3rd il[ii] se[i] le[i] [ii]/en lui/y[iii] lui
elle[ii] la[i] [ii]/en elle
on[iv] en soi
Plural 1st (colloquial) nous
1st (formal) nous
2nd vous
3rd ils[v] se[i] les/en leur/y[iii] eux[v]
elles[v] elles[v]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g je, me, te, se, le, and la become j', m', t', s', l', and l' respectively before a vowel or mute h. See Elision (French).
  2. ^ a b c d The pronoun il and its forms refer to males (like English "he"), while the pronoun elle and its forms refer to females (like English "she"). However, as all French nouns (even inanimate and intangible objects) are either grammatically masculine or feminine, these pronouns can also refer to masculine and feminine nouns. In this case, both il and elle translate to the English pronoun "it". Il can furthermore be used as the direct equivalent of English "it" in order to refer to unspecified neuter things such as facts and ideas (e.g. Il pleut – "It's raining").
  3. ^ a b Broadly speaking, lui and leur are used to refer to people, and y (see below) is used to refer to things. Lui and leur, however, will sometimes also be used to refer to things.[citation needed]
  4. ^ In formal French, the pronoun on is often replaced by l'on after a vowel (in particular after et, ou, qui, que, quoi and si); in particular, formal French often replaces si on and qu'on with si l'on and que l'on, respectively. This does not affect the meaning, only the pronunciation. In modern French, on has replaced nous as pronoun for the plural first person. Nous is used in formal usage.
  5. ^ a b c d In French, a group containing at least one male or one masculine noun is considered masculine, and takes the pronoun ils. Only exclusively female or feminine groups take elles.

The second person

French has a T-V distinction in the second person singular. That is, it uses two different sets of pronouns: tu and vous and their various forms.

The usage of Tu and Vous depends on the kind of relationship (formal or informal) that exists between the speaker and the person with whom they are speaking and the age differences between these subjects.[1] The pronoun tu is informal and singular, spoken to an individual who is equal or junior to the speaker. The pronoun vous is used in the singular (but with second-person plural verb forms) to speak to an individual who is senior to the speaker or socially "more important" than the speaker. Vous is also used in the plural for all groups of people, whether junior, equal or senior.

Subject pronouns

As noted above, the personal pronouns change form to reflect the role they play in their clause. The forms used for subjects are called the subject pronouns, subjective pronouns, or nominative pronouns. They are as follows:

  singular plural
first person je nous
second person informal tu vous
formal vous
third person masculine il ils
feminine elle elles

When the predicate is être ("to be") plus a noun phrase, the pronoun ce (c' in elision contexts) is normally used instead of the other third person subject pronouns. For example, « C'est un homme intelligent » ("He is a smart man"), « Ce sont mes parents » ("Those are my parents"). Ce is primarily used as a "neuter" pronoun to refer to events and situations: « J'ai vu Jean hier. C'était amusant. », "I saw John yesterday. It was fun."

Neologisms such as iel(le), ille, ul, ol and yul have emerged in recent years as gender-neutral alternatives to the masculine and feminine pronouns, but are not yet considered standard in French [2] despite their use in some speech communities.[3]

On

The subject pronoun on (from Old French [h]om, homme "man", from Latin homo "human being") is equivalent to the English indefinite pronouns one, you, and they (as in, "One is pleased to see...", "You never know what will...", and "They speak French in..."). It takes third-person singular verb forms in the same way that il and elle do, and is used:

  • In the same way as English "one", "you" and "they", where the subject is generalised or otherwise unclear or unimportant:
« C'est en forgeant que l'on devient forgeron. » "It is by blacksmithing that one becomes a blacksmith."
« penser que l'on a raison » "to think that you are right," i.e. "to think oneself right."
  • As an extension of the above, it is often used to avoid the passive voice in French:
« On me l'a donné. » "[Someone] gave it to me." In English, it would be more common to say, "It was given to me.", which would be rendered as « Ça / il / elle m'a été donné(e). » in French.
  • To replace the subject pronoun nous in informal speech. In this case, on takes plural adjectives, even though it always takes a third-person singular verb. The corresponding reflexive object pronoun, se, is also third-person, but first-person possessive pronouns must be used when on meaning nous is the antecedent. The associated disjunctive pronoun in this context is nous.
« On est sur le point de partir. » "We are about to go."
« Nous, on est américains, et vous, vous êtes français. » "Us, we are American, and you, you are French."
« On se débarrasse de nos bagages ? » "Shall we get rid of our luggage?"
Colloquial replacement of nous by on
Function
Number Person Subject Reflexive Direct object Indirect object Disjunctive
Plural 1st formal nous
informal on se nous

It is never used for the number one, or as in one of them. As in English, numbers can be used as pronouns, and this is also true of the French word un(e):

« Deux sont entrés et un est ressorti » "Two went in and one came back out."

On has limited pronoun forms: it has only a reflexive form, se, and a disjunctive form soi (which is also only used when the sense is reflexive). The pronoun quelqu'un ("someone") can sometimes be used to fill the roles of on:

« Quelqu'un m'a dit... » "Someone told me..."

Direct-object pronouns

Like the English him, her, it, and them, the pronouns le, la, and les are only used with definite direct objects. For indefinite ones (e.g., "some juice"), en is used; see "The pronoun en" below.

  singular plural
first person me nous
second person informal te vous
formal vous
third person masculine le les
feminine la

Le, la, and les are not used when the direct object refers to the same entity as the subject; see the section on the reflexive pronouns, below.

Examples:

  • (I have a book.) I am giving it to the teacher. « Je le donne au prof. »
  • (Danielle is my sister.) Have you seen her? « Est-ce que tu l'as vue ? »

Indirect-object pronouns

  singular plural
first person me nous
second person informal te vous
formal vous
third person lui leur

In French, an indirect object is an object of a verb that is introduced using a preposition (especially the preposition à). For example, in the sentence « J'ai parlé à Jean » ("I spoke to Jean"), Jean is the indirect object in the French sentence.

Indirect-object pronouns (or dative pronouns) generally only replace indirect objects with the preposition à. When an indirect object pronoun is used, it replaces the entire prepositional phrase; for example, « Je lui ai donné un livre » ("I gave him a book").

Broadly speaking, lui and leur are used to refer to people, and y (see "The pronoun y" below) is used to refer to things. However, lui and leur will sometimes also be used in referring to things.

Lui, leur, and y are replaced with se (s' before a vowel) when the indirect object refers to the same entity as the subject; see the section on the reflexive pronouns below.

As mentioned above, the indirect object pronouns are not always used to replace indirect objects:

  • They are not used when the preposition is de rather than à; but see the section on the pronoun en, below.
  • Some verbs are incompatible with indirect object pronouns, such as penser ("to think about") and all reflexive verbs. For example, one says, « Je me fie à lui » ("I put my trust in him"), not « * Je me lui fie ».

Reflexive pronouns

  singular plural
first person me nous
second person informal te vous
formal vous
third person se

In French, as in English, reflexive pronouns are used in place of direct- and indirect-object pronouns that refer to the same entity or entities as the subject. A verb with a reflexive pronoun is called a reflexive verb, and has many grammatical particularities aside from the choice of pronoun; see French verbs.

There are four kinds of reflexive verbs:

  1. Verbs that are inherently reflexive. For example, the verb se souvenir ("to remember") has no non-reflexive counterpart; the verb souvenir has no meaning on its own.
  2. Verbs whose direct or indirect objects refer to the same entities as their subjects. For example, « Je m'achèterai cela » ("I shall buy myself that") is just a special case of « Je lui achèterai cela » ("I shall buy him that") that happens to be reflexive.
  3. Verbs indicating reciprocal actions. For example, « Ils se parlent » means "They are talking to each other." In cases of possible ambiguity, the reciprocal interpretation can be reinforced by adding « Ils se parlent l'un à l'autre ».
  4. Verbs indicating a passive action. For example, one might say, « La porte s'ouvre », which literally means, "The door is opening itself," but really means, "The door is opening."

All four kinds use the reflexive pronouns, and exhibit the grammatical particularities of reflexive verbs.

Disjunctive pronouns

  singular plural
first person moi nous
second person informal toi vous
formal vous
third person masculine lui eux
feminine elle elles

Disjunctive pronouns are the strong forms of French pronouns, the forms used in isolation and in emphatic positions (compare the use of me in the English sentence "Me, I believe you, but I am not sure anyone else will"; for more, see Intensive pronoun).

In French, disjunctive pronouns are used in the following circumstances:

  • as the objects of prepositions: « Je le fais pour toi », "I am doing it for you."
  • in dislocated positions: « Toi, je t'ai déjà vu, moi. », "You, I have seen you before, I have."
  • in cleft sentences: « C'est toi qui as tort », "It is you who are wrong." lit. "It is you who have error/wrong."
  • in compound noun phrases: « Lui et moi sommes américains », "He and I are American" (though one might equally say, « Lui et moi, nous sommes américains / on est américains »).
  • as emphatic subjects (third person only): « Lui sait le faire », "He knows how to do it" (though one might equally say, « Lui, il sait le faire »).

The reflexive disjunctive form soi can be used as the object of a preposition, if it refers to the same entity as the subject. For example, « Un voyageur sait se sentir chez soi n'importe où », "A traveller knows how to feel at home anywhere." Note that this does not make the verb reflexive.

The pronoun y

The pronoun y has two distinct uses:

  • It is the indirect-object pronoun used with things introduced by the preposition à. For more on this use, see above.
  • It is used to replace a spatial prepositional phrase. In this sense, it might be translated as there. For example:
    « Je vais à Paris. » → « J'y vais. » ("I am going to Paris." → "I am going there.")
    « Est-ce que tu travailles dans ce bureau ? — Non, je n'y travaille plus. » ("Do you work in that office? — No, I do not work there anymore.")
  • It is used idiomatically with certain verbs, without replacing anything:
    « Il doit y avoir une erreur. » ("There must be a mistake.")
    « Je commence à y voir un peu plus clair. » ("I am starting to see things more clearly.")

The pronoun en

The pronoun en has the following uses:

  • It is the indirect-object pronoun used with things (including infinitives) introduced by the preposition de. It is also sometimes used in the same way with people (however, it is more common to use disjunctive pronouns rather than using en in the case of people).:
    « Je parle du problème. » → « J'en parle. » ("I am talking about the problem." → "I am talking about it.")
    « Je parle de Jean. » → « J'en parle. » or « Je parle de lui. » ("I am talking about Jean." → "I am talking about him.")
  • It is used to replace a spatial prepositional phrase introduced by de ("from"). In this sense, it might be translated as from there:
    « Je viens de France. » → « J'en viens. » ("I come from France." → "I come from there.")
  • It is the direct-object pronoun used to replace indefinite direct objects; that is, direct objects that are:
    • introduced by the partitive article (including the plural indefinite article)
      « J'ai bu du jus de pomme. » → « J'en ai bu. » ("I drank some apple juice." → "I drank some.")
    • introduced by de when the verb is negated
      « Je n'ai pas vu de vaches. » → Je n'en ai pas vu. ("I did not see any cows." → "I did not see any.")
    • introduced by a numeral (including the singular indefinite article) or a plural expression (d'autres, certains, quelques)
      « J'ai mangé une pomme. » → « J'en ai mangé une. » ("I ate an apple." → "I ate one.")
      « J'ai mangé quelques pommes. » → J'en ai mangé quelques-unes. ("I ate a number of apples." → "I ate a number of them.")
    • introduced by another expression of quantity (usually an adverb + de)
      « J'ai vendu beaucoup de jus de pomme. » → « J'en ai vendu beaucoup. » ("I sold a lot of apple juice." → "I sold a lot.")
      « J'ai acheté trois kilogrammes de pommes. » → « J'en ai acheté trois kilogrammes. » ("I bought three kilograms of apples." → "I bought three kilograms.")
  • It is used idiomatically with certain verbs, without replacing anything:
    « J'en veux à Jean. » ("I am mad at Jean.")
    « Je vais en finir avec lui. » ("I am going to finish things off with him.")

Clitic order

French personal pronouns, aside from their disjunctive forms, are all clitics,[4] and the order of pronominal clitics as well as the negative clitic ne is strictly determined as follows.[5][6] Only one clitic can be used for each slot. Where one wishes to express an idea that would involve slots that cannot coexist or multiple pronouns from the same slot, the indirect object is expressed as the object of à or pour (thus Je me donne à toi – "I give myself to you"). The use of more than two clitics beyond the subject and, where necessary, ne is uncommon; constructions such as Je lui y en ai donné may be perceived as unacceptable, and other constructions must then be used to express the same ideas.

Proclitic order
Slots 3 and 5 cannot coexist.
Number Person Slot
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Nom Neg Obj COD COI Loc Gen
Singular 1st je ne me        
2nd tu te
3rd il se le lui y en
elle la
on le/la    
Plural 1st nous nous  
2nd vous vous
3rd ils se les leur y en
elles
Enclitic order
Used only for positive imperatives. Slots 2 and 3 cannot coexist.
Number Person Slot
1 2 3 4 5
COD COI Obj Loc Gen
Singular 1st     -moi1    
2nd -toi1
3rd -le -lui   (-z)-y1 (-z)-en1
-la
Plural 1st     -nous    
2nd -vous
3rd -les -leur   (-z)-y1 (-z)-en1
  1. The clitics -moi and -toi become -m' and -t' respectively when followed by either -en or -y. In colloquial French, however, it is possible to keep -moi and -toi intact and change -en and -y to -z-en and -z-y respectively, or to put slot 5 before slot 3, or less commonly, before slot 1 or 2.
    ex. The imperative sentences corresponding to « Tu m'en donnes »:
    « Donne-m'en. » /dɔn.mɑ̃/ (formal)
    « Donne-moi-z-en. » /dɔn.mwa.zɑ̃/ (informal)
    « Donnes-en-moi. » /dɔn.zɑ̃.mwa/ (informal)

See also

References

  1. ^ "French Subject Pronouns - Lesson 1". Transtle. 2021-03-27. Retrieved 2021-05-03.
  2. ^ "Nonbinary pronoun 'they' sparks French language debate". The Connexion, December 11, 2019.
  3. ^ Knisely, Kris A. Le français non-binaire: Linguistic forms used by non-binary speakers of French. Foreign Language Annals. 2020;53:850–876.https://doi.org/10.1111/flan.12500876
  4. ^ De Cat, Cécile (2005), (PDF), Lingua, 115 (9): 1195–1219, doi:10.1016/j.lingua.2004.02.002, archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-14, retrieved 2007-04-10
  5. ^ Miller, Philip H.; Sag, Ivan A. (1997), (PDF), Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, 15 (3): 573–639, doi:10.1023/A:1005815413834, S2CID 14061949, archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-14
  6. ^ Bonami, Olivier; Boyé, Gilles (2005), (PDF), Proceedings of the 5th Mediterranean Morphology Meeting, archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-22, retrieved 2010-06-26

french, personal, pronouns, analogous, english, they, reflect, person, number, their, referent, case, third, person, gender, well, much, like, english, distinction, between, except, that, french, lacks, inanimate, third, person, pronoun, gender, neutral, they,. French personal pronouns analogous to English I you he she we and they reflect the person and number of their referent and in the case of the third person its gender as well much like the English distinction between him and her except that French lacks an inanimate third person pronoun it or a gender neutral they and thus draws this distinction among all third person nouns singular and plural They also reflect the role they play in their clause subject direct object indirect object or other Personal pronouns display a number of grammatical particularities and complications not found in their English counterparts some of them can only be used in certain circumstances some of them change form depending on surrounding words and their placement is largely unrelated to the placement of the nouns they replace Contents 1 Overview 1 1 The second person 2 Subject pronouns 2 1 On 3 Direct object pronouns 4 Indirect object pronouns 5 Reflexive pronouns 6 Disjunctive pronouns 7 The pronoun y 8 The pronoun en 9 Clitic order 10 See also 11 ReferencesOverview EditFrench Personal Pronouns FunctionNumber Person Subject Reflexive Direct object Indirect object DisjunctiveSingular 1st je i me i moi2nd informal tu te i toi2nd formal vous3rd il ii se i le i ii en lui y iii luielle ii la i ii en elleon iv en soiPlural 1st colloquial nous1st formal nous2nd vous3rd ils v se i les en leur y iii eux v elles v elles v a b c d e f g je me te se le and la become j m t s l and l respectively before a vowel or mute h See Elision French a b c d The pronoun il and its forms refer to males like English he while the pronoun elle and its forms refer to females like English she However as all French nouns even inanimate and intangible objects are either grammatically masculine or feminine these pronouns can also refer to masculine and feminine nouns In this case both il and elle translate to the English pronoun it Il can furthermore be used as the direct equivalent of English it in order to refer to unspecified neuter things such as facts and ideas e g Il pleut It s raining a b Broadly speaking lui and leur are used to refer to people and y see below is used to refer to things Lui and leur however will sometimes also be used to refer to things citation needed In formal French the pronoun on is often replaced by l on after a vowel in particular after et ou qui que quoi and si in particular formal French often replaces si on and qu on with si l on and que l on respectively This does not affect the meaning only the pronunciation In modern French on has replaced nous as pronoun for the plural first person Nous is used in formal usage a b c d In French a group containing at least one male or one masculine noun is considered masculine and takes the pronoun ils Only exclusively female or feminine groups take elles The second person Edit French has a T V distinction in the second person singular That is it uses two different sets of pronouns tu and vous and their various forms The usage of Tu and Vous depends on the kind of relationship formal or informal that exists between the speaker and the person with whom they are speaking and the age differences between these subjects 1 The pronoun tu is informal and singular spoken to an individual who is equal or junior to the speaker The pronoun vous is used in the singular but with second person plural verb forms to speak to an individual who is senior to the speaker or socially more important than the speaker Vous is also used in the plural for all groups of people whether junior equal or senior Subject pronouns EditAs noted above the personal pronouns change form to reflect the role they play in their clause The forms used for subjects are called the subject pronouns subjective pronouns or nominative pronouns They are as follows singular pluralfirst person je noussecond person informal tu vousformal vousthird person masculine il ilsfeminine elle ellesWhen the predicate is etre to be plus a noun phrase the pronoun ce c in elision contexts is normally used instead of the other third person subject pronouns For example C est un homme intelligent He is a smart man Ce sont mes parents Those are my parents Ce is primarily used as a neuter pronoun to refer to events and situations J ai vu Jean hier C etait amusant I saw John yesterday It was fun Neologisms such as iel le ille ul ol and yul have emerged in recent years as gender neutral alternatives to the masculine and feminine pronouns but are not yet considered standard in French 2 despite their use in some speech communities 3 On Edit The subject pronoun on from Old French h om homme man from Latin homo human being is equivalent to the English indefinite pronouns one you and they as in One is pleased to see You never know what will and They speak French in It takes third person singular verb forms in the same way that il and elle do and is used In the same way as English one you and they where the subject is generalised or otherwise unclear or unimportant C est en forgeant que l on devient forgeron It is by blacksmithing that one becomes a blacksmith penser que l on a raison to think that you are right i e to think oneself right As an extension of the above it is often used to avoid the passive voice in French On me l a donne Someone gave it to me In English it would be more common to say It was given to me which would be rendered as Ca il elle m a ete donne e in French To replace the subject pronoun nous in informal speech In this case on takes plural adjectives even though it always takes a third person singular verb The corresponding reflexive object pronoun se is also third person but first person possessive pronouns must be used when on meaning nous is the antecedent The associated disjunctive pronoun in this context is nous On est sur le point de partir We are about to go Nous on est americains et vous vous etes francais Us we are American and you you are French On se debarrasse de nos bagages Shall we get rid of our luggage Colloquial replacement of nous by on FunctionNumber Person Subject Reflexive Direct object Indirect object DisjunctivePlural 1st formal nousinformal on se nousIt is never used for the number one or as in one of them As in English numbers can be used as pronouns and this is also true of the French word un e Deux sont entres et un est ressorti Two went in and one came back out On has limited pronoun forms it has only a reflexive form se and a disjunctive form soi which is also only used when the sense is reflexive The pronoun quelqu un someone can sometimes be used to fill the roles of on Quelqu un m a dit Someone told me Direct object pronouns EditLike the English him her it and them the pronouns le la and les are only used with definite direct objects For indefinite ones e g some juice en is used see The pronoun en below singular pluralfirst person me noussecond person informal te vousformal vousthird person masculine le lesfeminine laLe la and les are not used when the direct object refers to the same entity as the subject see the section on the reflexive pronouns below Examples I have a book I am giving it to the teacher Je le donne au prof Danielle is my sister Have you seen her Est ce que tu l as vue Indirect object pronouns Edit singular pluralfirst person me noussecond person informal te vousformal vousthird person lui leurIn French an indirect object is an object of a verb that is introduced using a preposition especially the preposition a For example in the sentence J ai parle a Jean I spoke to Jean Jean is the indirect object in the French sentence Indirect object pronouns or dative pronouns generally only replace indirect objects with the preposition a When an indirect object pronoun is used it replaces the entire prepositional phrase for example Je lui ai donne un livre I gave him a book Broadly speaking lui and leur are used to refer to people and y see The pronoun y below is used to refer to things However lui and leur will sometimes also be used in referring to things Lui leur and y are replaced with se s before a vowel when the indirect object refers to the same entity as the subject see the section on the reflexive pronouns below As mentioned above the indirect object pronouns are not always used to replace indirect objects They are not used when the preposition is de rather than a but see the section on the pronoun en below Some verbs are incompatible with indirect object pronouns such as penser to think about and all reflexive verbs For example one says Je me fie a lui I put my trust in him not Je me lui fie Reflexive pronouns Edit singular pluralfirst person me noussecond person informal te vousformal vousthird person seIn French as in English reflexive pronouns are used in place of direct and indirect object pronouns that refer to the same entity or entities as the subject A verb with a reflexive pronoun is called a reflexive verb and has many grammatical particularities aside from the choice of pronoun see French verbs There are four kinds of reflexive verbs Verbs that are inherently reflexive For example the verb se souvenir to remember has no non reflexive counterpart the verb souvenir has no meaning on its own Verbs whose direct or indirect objects refer to the same entities as their subjects For example Je m acheterai cela I shall buy myself that is just a special case of Je lui acheterai cela I shall buy him that that happens to be reflexive Verbs indicating reciprocal actions For example Ils se parlent means They are talking to each other In cases of possible ambiguity the reciprocal interpretation can be reinforced by adding Ils se parlent l un a l autre Verbs indicating a passive action For example one might say La porte s ouvre which literally means The door is opening itself but really means The door is opening All four kinds use the reflexive pronouns and exhibit the grammatical particularities of reflexive verbs Disjunctive pronouns Edit singular pluralfirst person moi noussecond person informal toi vousformal vousthird person masculine lui euxfeminine elle ellesDisjunctive pronouns are the strong forms of French pronouns the forms used in isolation and in emphatic positions compare the use of me in the English sentence Me I believe you but I am not sure anyone else will for more see Intensive pronoun In French disjunctive pronouns are used in the following circumstances as the objects of prepositions Je le fais pour toi I am doing it for you in dislocated positions Toi je t ai deja vu moi You I have seen you before I have in cleft sentences C est toi qui as tort It is you who are wrong lit It is you who have error wrong in compound noun phrases Lui et moi sommes americains He and I are American though one might equally say Lui et moi nous sommes americains on est americains as emphatic subjects third person only Lui sait le faire He knows how to do it though one might equally say Lui il sait le faire The reflexive disjunctive form soi can be used as the object of a preposition if it refers to the same entity as the subject For example Un voyageur sait se sentir chez soi n importe ou A traveller knows how to feel at home anywhere Note that this does not make the verb reflexive The pronoun y EditThe pronoun y has two distinct uses It is the indirect object pronoun used with things introduced by the preposition a For more on this use see above It is used to replace a spatial prepositional phrase In this sense it might be translated as there For example Je vais a Paris J y vais I am going to Paris I am going there Est ce que tu travailles dans ce bureau Non je n y travaille plus Do you work in that office No I do not work there anymore It is used idiomatically with certain verbs without replacing anything Il doit y avoir une erreur There must be a mistake Je commence a y voir un peu plus clair I am starting to see things more clearly The pronoun en EditThe pronoun en has the following uses It is the indirect object pronoun used with things including infinitives introduced by the preposition de It is also sometimes used in the same way with people however it is more common to use disjunctive pronouns rather than using en in the case of people Je parle du probleme J en parle I am talking about the problem I am talking about it Je parle de Jean J en parle or Je parle de lui I am talking about Jean I am talking about him It is used to replace a spatial prepositional phrase introduced by de from In this sense it might be translated as from there Je viens de France J en viens I come from France I come from there It is the direct object pronoun used to replace indefinite direct objects that is direct objects that are introduced by the partitive article including the plural indefinite article J ai bu du jus de pomme J en ai bu I drank some apple juice I drank some introduced by de when the verb is negated Je n ai pas vu de vaches Je n en ai pas vu I did not seeany cows I did not see any introduced by a numeral including the singular indefinite article or a plural expression d autres certains quelques J ai mange une pomme J en ai mange une I ate an apple I ate one J ai mange quelques pommes J en ai mange quelques unes I ate a number of apples I ate a number of them introduced by another expression of quantity usually an adverb de J ai vendu beaucoup de jus de pomme J en ai vendu beaucoup I sold a lot of apple juice I sold a lot J ai achete trois kilogrammes de pommes J en ai achete trois kilogrammes I bought three kilograms of apples I bought three kilograms It is used idiomatically with certain verbs without replacing anything J en veux a Jean I am mad at Jean Je vais en finir avec lui I am going to finish things off with him Clitic order EditFrench personal pronouns aside from their disjunctive forms are all clitics 4 and the order of pronominal clitics as well as the negative clitic ne is strictly determined as follows 5 6 Only one clitic can be used for each slot Where one wishes to express an idea that would involve slots that cannot coexist or multiple pronouns from the same slot the indirect object is expressed as the object of a or pour thus Je me donne a toi I give myself to you The use of more than two clitics beyond the subject and where necessary ne is uncommon constructions such as Je lui y en ai donne may be perceived as unacceptable and other constructions must then be used to express the same ideas Proclitic order Slots 3 and 5 cannot coexist Number Person Slot1 2 3 4 5 6 7Nom Neg Obj COD COI Loc GenSingular 1st je ne me 2nd tu te3rd il se le lui y enelle laon le la Plural 1st nous nous 2nd vous vous3rd ils se les leur y enellesEnclitic order Used only for positive imperatives Slots 2 and 3 cannot coexist Number Person Slot1 2 3 4 5COD COI Obj Loc GenSingular 1st moi1 2nd toi13rd le lui z y1 z en1 laPlural 1st nous 2nd vous3rd les leur z y1 z en1The clitics moi and toi become m and t respectively when followed by either en or y In colloquial French however it is possible to keep moi and toi intact and change en and y to z en and z y respectively or to put slot 5 before slot 3 or less commonly before slot 1 or 2 ex The imperative sentences corresponding to Tu m en donnes Donne m en dɔn mɑ formal Donne moi z en dɔn mwa zɑ informal Donnes en moi dɔn zɑ mwa informal See also EditFrench pronounsReferences Edit French Subject Pronouns Lesson 1 Transtle 2021 03 27 Retrieved 2021 05 03 Nonbinary pronoun they sparks French language debate The Connexion December 11 2019 Knisely Kris A Le francais non binaire Linguistic forms used by non binary speakers of French Foreign Language Annals 2020 53 850 876 https doi org 10 1111 flan 12500876 De Cat Cecile 2005 French subject clitics are not agreement markers PDF Lingua 115 9 1195 1219 doi 10 1016 j lingua 2004 02 002 archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 14 retrieved 2007 04 10 Miller Philip H Sag Ivan A 1997 French Clitic Movement Without Clitics or Movement PDF Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 15 3 573 639 doi 10 1023 A 1005815413834 S2CID 14061949 archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 14 Bonami Olivier Boye Gilles 2005 French pronominal clitics and the design of Paradigm Function Morphology PDF Proceedings of the 5th Mediterranean Morphology Meeting archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 22 retrieved 2010 06 26 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French personal pronouns amp oldid 1111621173, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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