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Leçon 7 – Parler de sa famille 👨‍👩‍👦


Here we look in more detail at what we saw in the course video, concentrating on the important grammar points.

Les adjectifs possessifs (the possessive adjectives)

In French there are few more of these words to juggle, and which one you use depends on a few different factors…

You might remember that all French nouns are either masculine or feminine. Even things like tables and lamps. The upshot of this is that French possessive adjectives will change depending on the gender of the noun they’re describing. 

 SingularSingularPluralPlural
Personnemasculinefemininemasculinefeminine
je (I)mon (my)ma (my)mes (my)mes (my)
tu (you)ton (your)ta (your)tes (your)tes (your)
il/elle (he/she)son (her/his)sa (her/his)ses (her/his)ses (her/his)
nous (we)notre (our)notre (our)nos (our)nos (our)
vous (you)votre (your)votre (your)vos (your)vos (your)
ils/elles (they)leur (their)leur (their)leurs (their)leurs (their)

In English, the word “my” stays the same. But in French it changes depending on whether you’re talking about a masculine noun (père) or a feminine noun (mère).

Examples:

  • J’aime ses créations > I like her/his creations
  • Il déteste ses enfants > He hates his children
  • Nous commençons nos jours heureux > We begin our happy days
  • Nous commencons nos cours de français > We start our French lessons

Exception: If the feminine noun begins with a vowel or a mute ‘h’, we use mon, ton, son instead of ma, ta, sa. For example: mon amie (my girl friend), ton histoire (your story).

Notice that French does not use the possessive adjective to talk about body parts that are “owned” by someone; they are just referred to with the definite article, or as “the __.” The ownership is instead expressed by the reflexive pronoun (metese, etc.).

Je me lave le pied. I am washing my foot.

Elle se brosse les dents. She brushes her teeth.

This may be a lot of information for you at once, but no worries! You will find that within a month you will have memorized them easily and if you make a mistake in the agreement of one of these adjectives, it doesn’t matter, we will still understand you 🙂

Les membres de la famille

Family is one of the most common topics of conversation, so it is important that you know the basics.

Useful questions for the family:

  • Tu as des enfants ? > You have children?
  • Tu as des frères et soeurs ? > Do you have brothers and sisters?
  • Combien d’enfants tu as ? > How many children do you have?
  • Où sont tes parents ? > Where are your parents?

To go further:
L’oncle – The uncle
La tante – The auntie
Le neveu – The nephew
La nièce – The niece


Illustration – listen carefully

“Je m’entends bien avec ma famille. Mon père et mes parents sont toujours là pour moi.”

“I get along well with my family. My father and my parents are always there for me.”

To you!


Les nombres de 21 à 69

We continue today with numbers, and get into the hard part of the numbers that “adds up” in French (a real mathematicians’ country!), it is strange at first, but there is a certain logic to it.

To learn numbers quickly, we advise that you always start by learning the tens and then understand the structure. You already know “dix” (10) and “vingt” (20).

In the video you could see:

  • 30 : trente
  • 40 : quarante
  • 50 : cinquante
  • 60 : soixante

Here are some examples:

21vingt-et-untwenty-one
22vingt-deuxtwenty-two
23vingt-troistwenty-three
24vingt-quatretwenty-four
25vingt-cinqtwenty-five
26vingt-sixtwenty-six
27vingt-septtwenty-seven
28vingt-huittwenty-eight
29vingt-neuftwenty-nine
30trentethirty
50cinquantefifty
51cinquante-et-unfifty-one
52cinquante-deuxfifty-two
53cinquante-troisfifty-three
54cinquante-quatrefifty-four
55cinquante-cinqfifty-five
56cinquante-sixfifty-six
57cinquante-septfifty-seven
58cinquante-huitfifty-eight
59cinquante-neuffifty-nine
60soixantesixty
61soixante-et-unsixty-one

It’s your turn to speak!



Parler des vêtements (Talking about clothes)

During the video you heard the verb “porter”, which is a verb from the first group whose conjugation you already know. Remember: je porte, tu portes, il/elle/on porte, nous portons, vous portez, ils portent.

The verb “porter” has different meanings, to see only the most commonly used ones:

  • To carry: je porte un meuble (I carry a piece of furniture)
  • To wear : il porte un joli manteau (he wears a nice coat)

Reminder for this lesson’s vocabulary

Mon/MesMy
Ma/mesMy
Ton, ta, tesHer/his
Notre/nosOur
VotreYour
leur/leursTheir
Une mèreA mother
Un pèreA father
Un frèreA brother
Une sœurA sister
Un grand-père (papi)A grandfather (granny)
Une grand-mère (mamie)A grandmother (nanny)
Mes ParentsMy parents
Mes enfantsMy children

Finish the lesson with the quiz

1 Comment
Collapse Comments
Iman Ahmadian 14/03/2024 at 13:07

In the “Illustration – listen carefully”
the automated voice said “… . Mon père … “, while in the text is “….. Mon frère …..”!
Thanks

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