Relative Pronouns - Qui, Que, Dont - National 5 French Revision - BBC
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- Relative pronouns and when do we use them?
- Qui, que, dont
Qui, que, dont
Using ‘qui’ to join two sentences together
Qui – means who if referring back to a person in the sentence:
la femme qui habite là-bas est très sympa – the lady who lives over there is very friendly
Qui can also mean which if referring back to a thing or place:
l’hôtel bleu qui est au bord de la mer est fermé - the blue hotel, which is by the sea, is closed
It is used to replace the subject of the sentence, for example:
- I have a bike + my bike is blue → I have a bike which is blue
- j’ai un vélo + mon vélo est bleu → j’ai un vélo qui est bleu
Using ‘que’ to join two sentences
Que – means that or which when referring back to an object in a sentence. For example:
- c’est le groupe que tu as vu au concert - it’s the band that you saw at the concert
(You is the subject of the sentence – ie the person doing the verb you saw. The band is the object, ie: what you saw.)
When que is used before a noun starting with a vowel it is shortened to qu’, for example:
- he ate the cake + the cake was delicious → the cake that he ate was delicious
(He is eating – so he is the subject, the cake is the object, ie what he ate) → le gâteau qu’il a mangé était délicieux
Using ‘dont’ to join two sentences
Dont – means whose, of which, of whom, about whom, about which, from which.
It is used a lot to refer back to things you have been talking about, for example:
- c’est de la mère de Pauline dont elle parle - it’s Pauline’s mum she’s talking about
- c’est l’émission dont tout le monde parle - it’s the programme everyone is talking about
More guides on this topic
- Subject pronouns - je, tu, il
- Direct object pronouns - me, te, le
- Indirect object pronouns - lui, leur
- Stressed pronouns - moi, toi, lui
- Possessive pronouns - le mien, le tien, le sien
- Demonstrative pronouns - celui
- Pronouns - y and en
Related links
- BBC Languages
- BBC News: France
- BBC Active
- SQA National 5 French
- Collins Dictionary
- Babbel.com
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