Search from various English teachers...
Chris Ching
"Passer de bons moments" ou "Passer un bon moment"
I saw "Passer de bons moments" in my textbook so it should be correct, but I just don't know why we use "de" here.
If "to have a good time" is translated as "Passer un bon moment", then "we had/ spent some good times" should be "Nous passions DES bons moments" instead of "de" ?
Apr 17, 2018 7:39 AM
Answers · 5
Il y a, en français, une règle qui dit que l'article "des" devient "de", si l'adjectif est placé devant le nom, et non derrière (la règle générale étant que l'adjectif vient après le nom). On dira par exemple : "nous avons mangé d'excellents gâteaux" et "nous avons mangé des gâteaux excellents".
April 17, 2018
Salut !
It's actually correct :)
Here "de" is like "some" as you said so it works.
But if you say "des bons moments", nobody will even notice ahah
April 17, 2018
salut ! Here you can't use "des" because of the adjective. When you have an adjective before the noun, you have to write "de".
So you can say : Je passe des moments agréables. But you say : Je passe de bons moments. It's just about the place of the adjective !
April 20, 2018
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!
Chris Ching
Language Skills
Chinese (Cantonese), French
Learning Language
French
Articles You May Also Like

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
9 likes · 8 Comments

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
31 likes · 8 Comments

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 likes · 12 Comments
More articles
