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Downtime
learning french
PREPOSITIONS – PART 1: à
| PREPOSITIONS – PART 1: à |
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| Monday, 09 June 2008 | |
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Prepositions are complicated in any language, and usage (rather than hard and fast rules) seems to prevail in many cases.
In this new series, we’ll review some common French prepositions, consider the rules and point out noteworthy exceptions
or different uses
Arguably à is the most important preposition in French: it has at least six distinct meanings or functions. It can denote location (in, at), destination (to), a time (at x o’clock), distance (à 10km de, 10km from), possession (un ami à moi), measurement (acheter au poids/au kilo – by weight/the kilo), manner, purpose, style etc. (aller à pied – go on/by foot, sac à dos – rucksack, la vie à la française – the French way of life).
à, en, dans denoting location/destination –
place-names Things get a bit more complicated with islands. If the name of the island is never or always preceded by the definite article then à is used (à Chypre, à Guernesey, à la Martinique, à la Jamaïque, and note the plural in aux Baléares, aux Antilles – the West Indies), but when the name of the island can be used with or without an article (after de in particular) then en is used (les villes de (la) Corse/Nouvelle-Zélande/Sicile…il vit en Corse…). With the names of French regions, départements and former provinces (and to a certain extent, those of foreign regions/counties/provinces etc, although usage seems to prevail over rule for the latter), the rules are fairly clear: • en with feminine singular regions (en Picardie, en Auvergne, en Normandie); • dans les with feminine plural regions (dans les Landes); • en or dans le with masculine regions (en/dans le Poitou, Languedoc…) and some former départements or provinces (Gévaudan, Quercy, Rouergue, Périgord…); • dans le with masculine present-day départements (dans l’Aveyron, le Cantal, le Calvados… ); • en or dans la with feminine singular départements beginning with a consonant (en/dans la Corrèze, Gironde…), with the notable exception of la Somme, which requires dans la (en somme means in short, all in all); • dans la with feminine singular départements beginning with a vowel (dans l’Oise/l’Aisne…); Finally, with compound nouns denoting names of départements: • en for singular names (Indre-et-Loire, Haute-Loire…) • dans les for plurals (dans les Bouches-du-Rhône) • dans le for masculine compounds, the first word of which is not a river or mountain (dans le – never en – Haut-Rhin, Pas-de-Calais, Puy-de-Dôme…). For foreign names of regions, provinces, states etc, feminine names tend to follow the same rules as for the names of countries (en Californie, Catalogne, Écosse, Floride… ). There appears to be no clear rule for masculine names (au Québec (never en), but dans le Valais. Au or dans le are interchangeable for (masculine) US states (au/dans le Texas, Kentucky) unless they begin with a vowel, in which case dans l’ is mandatory (dans l’Ohio, dans l’Indiana). For English counties, dans le sounds correct with masculine names (dans le Yorkshire…) and en with feminine names (en Cornouailles – in Cornwall, the only one I can think of, do you know of any other feminine ones?)
à, chez, en, dans
denoting location/destination – places
à, en with means of transport
à denoting possession |
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