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Felicity Thébault
"Pas Mal" in this sentence?
What's the meaning of 'pas mal' here?:
"Il y a pas mal de cafés."
At first, I thought it would be "not bad", but in this context that wouldn't make sense, so it must have a different meaning!
Could someone please translate it for me and give me some examples of how to use it?
Oct 8, 2015 7:34 PM
Answers · 4
1
Here it means "quite a lot".
There are quite a lot of cafés.
J'ai pas mal de travail à faire. I have quite a lot of work to do.
Elle a pas mal d'amis. She has quite a lot of friends.
It can also be used with verbs sometimes, without the "de".
Je l'ai pas mal aidée. I helped her quite a lot.
But this doesn't always work, the usage with verbs is very limited. I can't find another sentence, maybe it's the only one... :p
October 8, 2015
1
You are right. It has a different meaning here.
"Il y a pas mal de cafés." means 'There are quite a lot of cafes'.
Another example would be 'J'ai pas mal de travail', meaning 'I've got quite a lot of work' or, perhaps, more idiomatically 'I've got a fair bit of work'. 'Pas mal de choses' means 'quite a lot of things', and so on.
October 8, 2015
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Felicity Thébault
Language Skills
English, French, Italian, Korean, Norwegian, Spanish
Learning Language
French, Italian, Korean, Norwegian, Spanish
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