FrenchitépdailyB1 · Société et vie pratique

Les pronoms relatifs

Relative pronouns

B1 · Les pronoms relatifs
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Relative pronouns

At B1 level, you no longer speak in short, separate sentences. You connect your ideas. Relative pronouns (qui, que, , dont) join two sentences into one by replacing a repeated word, so your French sounds fluent rather than choppy. In the exam this is exactly the difference between a flat answer and a structured opinion.

The key is to find what the relative pronoun replaces, and its role in the second part of the sentence. Qui replaces the subject, que replaces the direct object, replaces a place or a time, and dont replaces a word introduced by de.

quiwho / which / that (subject)
que (qu')whom / which / that (object)
where / when (place or time)
dontof which / whose / about which
le voisinthe neighbour
un quartiera neighbourhood
une démarchean administrative step / procedure
un dossiera file / application
avoir besoin deto need (something)
parler deto talk about
se souvenir deto remember
le moment oùthe moment when
l'endroitthe place
rencontrerto meet
Practice

Associez chaque pronom relatif à son rôle.

Match each relative pronoun to its role.

  • qui
  • que
  • dont
Practice

Choisissez le bon pronom relatif.

Choose the correct relative pronoun.

Practice

Complétez avec qui ou que.

Complete with qui or que.

Le quartier ____ nous avons choisi est très vivant.

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Qui: the subject

Use qui when the noun you replace would be the subject of the verb that follows. After qui comes a verb. Qui never elides: it stays qui even before a vowel.

C'est un voisin qui m'aide souvent.
He's a neighbour who helps me often.
qui = subject of aide
Practice

Complétez avec le bon pronom relatif.

Complete with the right relative pronoun.

Voici le formulaire ____ j'ai besoin pour ma démarche.

Practice

Choisissez la phrase correcte.

Choose the correct sentence.

Practice

Complétez en élidant que devant une voyelle.

Complete with qu' before a vowel.

La ville ____ elle préfère, c'est Montréal.

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Que: the direct object

Use que when the noun you replace would be the direct object. After que comes a new subject (a noun or pronoun), then its verb. Before a vowel, que becomes qu'.

Le quartier que j'habite est très calme.
The neighbourhood that I live in is very quiet.
que = object, j' is the subject
La démarche qu'elle a faite était compliquée.
The procedure that she did was complicated.
qu' before a vowel
Practice

Remettez les mots dans l'ordre.

Put the words in order.

Tap the words in order
Practice

Traduisez en français.

Translate into French.

It's the office where I work.

Practice

Écoutez et tapez la phrase que vous entendez.

Listen and type the sentence you hear.

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Où and dont

Use for a place or a moment in time: la ville où je travaille, le jour où on s'est rencontrés. Use dont to replace a word that goes with de, which covers verbs like parler de, avoir besoin de, se souvenir de, and also the idea of whose: le dossier dont j'ai besoin, un ami dont la voiture est en panne.

C'est le bureau où j'ai déposé mon dossier.
It's the office where I dropped off my file.
où = place
Voici les documents dont vous avez besoin.
Here are the documents that you need.
dont = avoir besoin DE
Practice

Construisez la phrase avec dont.

Build the sentence with dont.

Tap the words in order
Practice

Traduisez en français.

Translate into French.

I have a colleague whose office is next to mine.

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In context

0:00Two neighbours talk about the new arrival in the building.0:00