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French Lessons-Level two 03 Shopping (Editing)



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V: Shopping



Shopping | Les achats>
To Go Shopping  Buying Goods  
faire des courses
faire du shopping 
to go shopping le(la) vendeur(euse)
le(la) cassier(-ière) 
salesperson
cashier 
faire le marché to go grocery shopping (plus/moins) cher(ère) (more/less) expensive 
faire du lèche-vitrine to go window shopping la vitrine display window 
porter to wear, to carry en solde on sale 
demander to ask (for) le prix price 
demander le prix - to ask for the price 
payer
payer à la caisse 
to pay
to pay at the counter 
la caisse cash register
checkout counter 
vendre to sell coûter to cost 
acheter to buy 
C’est combien?
Ça coûte combien? 
How much is it?
lit It's how much?
lit It costs how much? 
  Combien coûte nounHow much does noun cost?
lit How much costs noun
General Goods Stores Foods Stores 
le magasin shop; store le supermarché supermarket 
le centre commercial mall; shopping centre le hypermarché hypermarket; big supermarket 
le grand magasin department store la boucherie butcher shop 1  
le rayon department la boulangerie bakery 2  
la boutique small store le dépôt de pain a place that sells bread 2  
la pharmacie pharmacy; chemist la charcuterie delicatessen 3  
le marché outdoor market la crémerie dairy store 
  la pâtisserie pastry shop; pâtisserie 
  la poissonnerie seafood store; fishmonger 
  l'épicerie (f) grocery 4  

  1. French butchers do not sell pork, pork products, nor horsemeat. For these products, go to a charcuterie.
  2. In France, bakeries only sell fresh bread; e.g. the bread is baked on site. Places where they sell bread that is not fresh are called dépôt de pain.
  3. 'Charcuteries' sell things besides pork products, including pâté, salami, cold meats, salads, quiches and pizzas.
  4. An alternative to an 'épicerie' is an alimentation générale (a general foodstore).

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G: Object Pronouns Review



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Direct Objects



While the subject of a sentence initiates an action (the verb), the direct object is the one that is affected by the action. A direct object pronoun is used to refer to the direct object of a previous sentence:

Pierre voit le cambrioleurPierre sees the burglar
Pierre le voit. Pierre sees him

The following table shows the various types of direct object pronouns:

French  me, m' te, t' le, l' la, l' nous vous les 
English  me1 you1 him, it her, it us1 you1 them 

Notes:
  • 1 me, te, nous, and vous are also used as indirect objects to mean to me, to you, to us, and to you respectively.
  • The pronoun form with an apostrophe is used before a vowel.
  • The direct object pronoun for nous and vous is the same as the subject.
  • When the direct object comes before a verb in a perfect tense, a tense that uses a past participle, the direct object must agree in gender and plurality with the past participle. For example, in the phrase Je les ai eus, or I had them, the past participle would be spelled eus if the direct object, les, was referring to a masculine object, and eues if les is referring to a feminine object.

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Indirect Objects



An indirect object is an object that would be asked for with To whom...? or From whom...?. It is called indirect because it occurs usually together with a direct object which is affected directly by the action:

Il donne du pain à PierreHe gives some bread to Pierre
Il lui donne du pain. He gives bread to him

The following table shows the various types of indirect object pronouns:

French  me, m' te, t' lui nous vous leur 
English  to me1 to you1 to him, to her to us1 to you1 to them 

Notes:
  • 1 me, te, nous, and vous are also used as direct objects to mean me, you, us, and you respectively.
  • The pronoun form with an apostrophe is used before a vowel.
  • The indirect object pronoun for nous and vous is the same as the subject.
  • The indirect object pronouns do not agree with the past participle like the direct object pronouns do. When me, te, nous, and vous are used in a perfect tense, the writer must decide whether they are used as direct or indirect object pronouns. This is done by looking at the verb and seeing what type of action is being performed.

The bread is given by the man (direct). Pierre gets the given apple (indirect).

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G: -exer Verbs



-exer are regular -er verbs, but also are stem changing. The stem change applies to all forms except nous and vous. The stem change involves adding a grave accent ( ` ) over the e in the stem.

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Formation

French Present Verb | acheter | to buy | v | buy | buys | achète | jzah shet | achètes | ahshet | achète | ahshet | achetons | noozashtoh | achetez | voozahshtay | achètent | ahshet | pp=acheté

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Other -exer Verbs

  • peser - to weigh
  • mener - to carry out
  • emmener - to take along
  • amener - to bring
  • surmener - to overwork
  • lever - to raise
  • soulever - to raise

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V: Clothing



Clothing | Habillement>
les vêtements habillés - dress clothes les vêtements sport - casual clothes les chaussures - shoes 
la chemise button down shirt la casquette cap les chaussures shoes 
la cravate tie le tee-shirt t-shirt la paire de chaussures pair of shoes 
le pantalon pants le polo polo shirt les baskets basketball shoes
trainers 
le complet
le costume 
suit le pull(over) a sweater les tennis tennis shoes 
le manteau coat le sweat-shirt sweatshirt les sandales sandals 
le tailleur women's suit le blouson
la veste 
jacket  
la robe dress le jean jeans  
le chemisier blouse les chaussettes / les bas socks  
la jupe skirt  

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G: -yer verbs

-yer verbs are regular -er verbs. However, when y is part of the last syllable, it changes to i in order to keep the ay sound. In the present indicative of -yer verbs, this affects all forms except nous and vous.

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Payer

The verb payer translates to to pay.

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Formation

In the present indicative, payer (and all other -yer verbs) is conjuagted as follows:

French Present Verb | payer | to pay | pay | pays | paie | pay | paies | pay | paie | pay | payons | pay oh | payez | pay yay | paient
ou payent | pay | pp=payé


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Other -yer Verbs

  • appuyer - to support
  • employer - to employ
  • essayer - to try
  • essuyer - to wipe
  • nettoyer - to clean
  • tutoyer - to address as tu, to call someone informally

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G: Irregular Past Participles

Many of the verbs you have learned so far have irregular past participles.
  • avoir - eu
  • croire - cru
  • être - été
  • faire - fait
  • voir - vu

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V: Practise Conversations



Let's practise some of these words and verbs in some everyday shopping talk:

1. À la boulangerie (At the bakery)

Bernard (le boulanger) : Bonjour madame

Camille (la cliente) : Bonjour monsieur

Bernard : Que voulez-vous ?

Camille : Je voudrais acheter une baguette, s'il vous plaît

Bernard : Ce sera tout ?

Camille : Non, je voudrais deux croissants aussi

Bernard : Très bien - ça fait deux euros, s'il vous plaît

Camille : Merci beaucoup

Useful vocabulary:

"Que voulez-vous ?" or "Que désirez-vous ?" - What would you like?

"Je voudrais..." - I would like...

"Ce sera tout ?" - Is that all?

"Ça fait deux euros" - That will be two euros

acheter (to buy).

2. Au marché (At the market)

Marie (la marchande) : Bonjour monsieur

Clément (le client) : Bonjour madame

Clément : Qu'est-ce que vous avez à vendre ?

Marie : J'ai un grand choix de fruits et légumes

Clément : Très bien. Est-ce que vous avez des cerises ?

Marie : Oui... elles coûtent deux euros le kilo

Clément : Bon, je voudrais trois kilos, s'il vous plaît

Marie : Très bien, monsieur. Alors, pour trois kilos il faut payer six euros, s'il vous plaît.

Useful vocabulary:

"Qu'est-ce que vous avez... ?" - What do you have?

"Un grand choix" - A large range

"Des cerises" - Some cherries

"Elles coûtent deux euros le kilo" - They (feminine) cost two euros per kilo

"Il faut" - One must/You need to

vendre (to sell) and payer (to pay).

For learning
French
Category
Uncategorized
Level
Unspecified
Second language
English
Created
Apr 08, 2008 16:04
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