Demonstrative adjectives - ce, cette, ces
'This' and 'these' - ce, cette and ces in French - are called demonstrative adjectives. They are used when you want to point out a specific thing or person or to emphasise something.
They come before a noun and agree with the noun. For example:
- ce before a masculine singular noun, eg ce matin - this morning
- cette before a feminine singular noun, eg cette semaine - this week
Ces means 'these'. It's used before a noun in the plural form. For example:
- ces voitures - these cars (voitures = feminine plural)
- ces amis - these friends (amis = masculine plural/mixed group)
- ces hommes - these men (hommes = silent -h and plural)
- ces oranges - these oranges (oranges = vowel and plural)
Masculine | Masculine (before vowel or -h) | Feminine | English | |
Singular | ce | cet | cette | this |
Plural | ces | ces | ces | these |
Singular | |
---|---|
Masculine | ce |
Masculine (before vowel or -h) | cet |
Feminine | cette |
English | this |
Plural | |
---|---|
Masculine | ces |
Masculine (before vowel or -h) | ces |
Feminine | ces |
English | these |