French grammar: Être (to be)

Part ofFrenchFrench grammar

How to use the verb ‘to be’ in French

The verb ‘to be’ is in French.

Être is the most frequently used verb in French and it can be used in lots of different ways, including ‎describing people and things, giving opinions and saying where you are.

Learn about the verb ‘être’ in French with Burt Bessington

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How to form ‘être’

Être is an irregular verb. Regular verbs follow the same pattern, but irregular verbs don’t.

If you want to say ‘I am’ in French, you say:

– I am

The form of être changes as the person doing the verb changes.

FrenchEnglish
I am
You are
He is
She is
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Asking questions using ‘être’

Burt Bessington

To change a statement into a question, you add a question mark.

When writing the question in French, you leave a space between the final word and the question mark.

When you are asking the question, you stress the end of the sentence by saying the last syllable in a higher pitch. This is called rising intonation.

Can you hear the difference between these statements and questions?

– You are happy

– Are you happy?

– You are tired

– Are you tired?

Burt Bessington
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Describing yourself

Girl with a pony tail

You can use the verb to describe yourself.

Remember when describing somebody in French, the spelling of some adjectives can change depending the person you are describing.

For example, if the person you are describing is female, you will need the feminine form of the adjective.

If the person is male, you will need the masculine form of the adjective.

You can learn more about this in French grammar: Adjectives.

Girl with a pony tail
Form of adjectiveFrenchEnglish
masculineI am happy (boy)
feminineI am happy (girl)
masculineI am tall (boy)
feminineI am tall (girl)
masculineI am short (boy)
feminineI am short (girl)
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Describing others

Little girl with blonde hair in a ponytail

You can also describe other people.

– He is happy

– She is happy

– He is tall

– She is tall

– He is small

– She is small

Little girl with blonde hair in a ponytail
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Describing things

A useful word to use when describing things is c’est (it is).

This is formed using the word for ‘it’ ce (it) followed by est (is) from the verb être.

Did you notice how ce becomes c’ when it appears before a vowel? This makes it easier to say.

ce + est = c’est

You can use c’est to say what something is.

– It’s an apple

– It’s a dog

– It’s a horse

You can say something is yours.

– It’s my apple

– It’s my cap

– It’s my dog

– It’s my horse

You can ask where something is.

– Where is my book?

– It’s here

– It’s there

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Key French words

FrenchEnglish
a cat
a horse
a dog
to be
tired
big / tall
happy
a book
small / short
an apple
sad
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Quiz

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Play Dash and Blink: Forgotten French! game

Construct simple phrases and develop an understanding of vocabulary and grammar with this KS2 French game.

Play Dash and Blink: Forgotten French!
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