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David Butler
Could someone explain to me why sometimes "it is" has a gender in French? For example:
Tu aimes l'école ? C'est très intéressant.
It is = C'est
Tu aimes ma voiture ? Elle est très rapide.
It is = Elle est = feminine.
merci!
2025년 11월 23일 오전 3:13
답변 · 3
1
C’est is neutral and used for general statements.
il/Elle est is used when you refer to a specific noun you already mentioned, and it takes the gender of that noun.
If you are making a general comment, use c’est.
If you are talking about a thing directly and replacing the noun, use il/elle with the right gender.
2025년 11월 28일
1
It's because in French, every noun is either masculine or feminine. So if you spoke about your car, the car is a feminine noun. Instead of saying "the car" again, you would say "it" instead and we need to use the feminine form of "it". That is why when some French speakers are learning English they may say things like 'The car looks nice but she doesn't work.' English doesn't have a masculine or feminine form of "it" but French does. If you decide to learn Spanish, Italian, or Portuguese you will deal with this same concept in those languages as well. I hope this helps.
2025년 11월 25일
커뮤니티 가이드라인을 위반한 콘텐츠입니다.
2025년 11월 23일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!
David Butler
언어 구사 능력
영어, 프랑스어
학습 언어
프랑스어
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