A2 adjectives 5 min de lectura

Adjective Agreement

French adjectives are grammatical mirrors that must always reflect the gender and number of the noun.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Adjectives must match the noun's gender (masculine/feminine) and number (singular/plural).
  • Add 'e' for feminine and 's' for plural in most cases.
  • If a group is mixed gender, always use the masculine plural form.
  • Some adjectives like 'marron' are invariable and never change their spelling.

Quick Reference

Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Masculine Plural Feminine Plural
petit petite petits petites
intelligent intelligente intelligents intelligentes
heureux heureuse heureux heureuses
sportif sportive sportifs sportives
cher chère chers chères
facile facile faciles faciles
bon bonne bons bonnes

Ejemplos clave

3 de 8
1

Le vélo est vert.

The bicycle is green.

2

La voiture est verte.

The car is green.

3

Les garçons sont sportifs.

The boys are athletic.

💡

The Silent E

Adding an 'e' often makes the final consonant audible. Practice saying 'grand' (silent d) vs 'grande' (audible d)!

⚠️

Mixed Groups

Even if there are 100 women and 1 man, the adjective stays masculine plural. It's an old rule, but it's still the law!

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Adjectives must match the noun's gender (masculine/feminine) and number (singular/plural).
  • Add 'e' for feminine and 's' for plural in most cases.
  • If a group is mixed gender, always use the masculine plural form.
  • Some adjectives like 'marron' are invariable and never change their spelling.

Overview

Welcome to the heart of French style! In English, adjectives are easy. They never change. You have a "blue" car and "blue" cars. In French, adjectives are more like a mirror. They must reflect the noun they describe. If the noun is feminine, the adjective becomes feminine. If the noun is plural, the adjective becomes plural. Think of it like a dress code for a party. If the host wears a tuxedo, everyone else matches that level of formality. In French, the noun is the host. The adjective is the guest. They must always match in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural). Yes, even native speakers mess this up sometimes when they are tired, so don't sweat it too much! But getting this right is the secret to sounding like a pro.

How This Grammar Works

French nouns have a personality. They are either masculine or feminine. They are also either alone (singular) or in a group (plural). Adjectives are team players. They change their endings to support the noun. Most of the time, you just add an e for feminine and an s for plural. It sounds simple, right? It mostly is! However, the tricky part is that many of these changes are silent. You might write verte instead of vert, but they often sound very similar. This is why writing practice is your best friend here. Think of it like a grammar traffic light. The noun gives the signal, and the adjective follows the rules to keep the sentence moving smoothly.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1To master the look of your adjectives, follow these four basic steps:
  2. 2Start with the Masculine Singular form. This is the "default" version you find in the dictionary (e.g., grand).
  3. 3To make it Feminine Singular, add an e to the end (grande).
  4. 4To make it Masculine Plural, add an s to the end (grands).
  5. 5To make it Feminine Plural, add es to the end (grandes).
  6. 6But wait, there are some "rebel" patterns you should know:
  7. 7If the masculine ends in e, don't add another one! facile stays facile for both genders.
  8. 8If it ends in eux, the feminine becomes euse. Heureux (happy) becomes heureuse.
  9. 9If it ends in f, the feminine becomes ve. Sportif becomes sportive.
  10. 10If it ends in er, it becomes ère. Cher (expensive) becomes chère.

When To Use It

You need this rule every single time you describe something.

  • Ordering food: If you want a "small salad," you say une petite salade. Since salade is feminine, petit needs that e.
  • Job interviews: If you are describing yourself as "serious," a man says Je suis sérieux and a woman says Je suis sérieuse.
  • Asking directions: Looking for the "big cathedrals"? You’ll ask for les grandes cathédrales.
  • Social media: Posting about your "new friends"? Use mes nouveaux amis or mes nouvelles amies depending on who is in the photo.

When Not To Use It

There are a few moments where adjectives decide to be stubborn and stay exactly the same.

  • Invariable colors: Some colors based on real objects never change. Marron (chestnut/brown) and orange are the most common. You can have des chaussures marron (brown shoes) and the adjective doesn't get an s.
  • Compound colors: If you use two words for a color, like bleu marine (navy blue), they don't change.
  • Adverbs: Sometimes words look like adjectives but act like adverbs. In the phrase Elle parle fort (She speaks loudly), fort doesn't change because it describes the *speaking*, not the woman.

Common Mistakes

The most common slip-up is the "Gender Takeover." If you have a group of 99 women and 1 man, the whole group uses the masculine plural. It feels unfair, I know! But in French grammar, the masculine is the "default" for mixed groups.

  • Mistake: Les filles et les garçons sont contentes.
  • Correction: Les filles et les garçons sont contents.

Another mistake is forgetting the e on adjectives that end in a consonant. In petit, the t is silent. In petite, you actually pronounce the t. If you forget the e, you might accidentally change the sound of the word!

Contrast With Similar Patterns

In English, we say "The tall boy" and "The tall girls." The word "tall" is a rock; it never moves. In Spanish, you might be used to o and a endings (chico alto / chica alta). French is very similar to Spanish in this regard, but the endings are different. While Spanish uses o, French often uses nothing (the consonant) for masculine. While Spanish uses a, French uses e. If you've studied other Romance languages, you'll find the logic familiar, but the "spelling" is uniquely French.

Quick FAQ

Q. Do I always add an s for plural?

A. Almost always! But if the word already ends in s or x (like français or heureux), you add nothing.

Q. What if I don't know the gender of the noun?

A. When in doubt, use the masculine. It's the safest bet while you're still learning.

Q. Does the adjective always come after the noun?

A. Usually, yes! But a few short, common ones like beau, petit, and grand come before. We call these the BANGS adjectives (Beauty, Age, Number, Goodness, Size).

Reference Table

Masculine Singular Feminine Singular Masculine Plural Feminine Plural
petit petite petits petites
intelligent intelligente intelligents intelligentes
heureux heureuse heureux heureuses
sportif sportive sportifs sportives
cher chère chers chères
facile facile faciles faciles
bon bonne bons bonnes
💡

The Silent E

Adding an 'e' often makes the final consonant audible. Practice saying 'grand' (silent d) vs 'grande' (audible d)!

⚠️

Mixed Groups

Even if there are 100 women and 1 man, the adjective stays masculine plural. It's an old rule, but it's still the law!

🎯

Dictionary Defaults

Dictionaries always list the masculine singular form first. Use that as your base camp before adding endings.

💬

Polite Descriptions

When describing people in France, using the correct agreement shows you respect their identity. It's a small detail that makes a big difference.

Ejemplos

8
#1 Le vélo est vert.

Le vélo est vert.

Focus: vert

The bicycle is green.

Basic masculine singular agreement.

#2 La voiture est verte.

La voiture est verte.

Focus: verte

The car is green.

Basic feminine singular agreement (add 'e').

#3 Les garçons sont sportifs.

Les garçons sont sportifs.

Focus: sportifs

The boys are athletic.

Masculine plural with 's'.

#4 Les filles sont sportives.

Les filles sont sportives.

Focus: sportives

The girls are athletic.

Feminine plural with 've' + 's'.

#5 ✗ La pomme est rouge s → ✓ La pomme est rouge.

La pomme est rouge.

Focus: rouge

The apple is red.

If the masculine ends in 'e', the feminine is the same.

#6 ✗ Ils sont heureuxs → ✓ Ils sont heureux.

Ils sont heureux.

Focus: heureux

They are happy.

Words ending in 'x' don't add an 's' for plural.

#7 Des chaussures marron.

J'ai acheté des chaussures marron.

Focus: marron

I bought some brown shoes.

Advanced: 'marron' is invariable and never changes.

#8 Une belle femme.

C'est une belle femme.

Focus: belle

She is a beautiful woman.

Irregular feminine form of 'beau'.

Ponte a prueba

Choose the correct form of the adjective 'grand' (big/tall).

Ma sœur est très ___.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: grande

Since 'sœur' (sister) is feminine singular, you must add an 'e' to 'grand'.

Choose the correct form of 'heureux' (happy).

Mes amis sont ___.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: heureux

'Amis' is masculine plural. Adjectives ending in 'x' don't change in the masculine plural.

Choose the correct form of 'bleu' (blue).

J'aime ces chemises ___.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: bleues

'Chemises' is feminine plural, so you need to add both 'e' (feminine) and 's' (plural).

🎉 Puntuación: /3

Ayudas visuales

Regular vs. Irregular Endings

Regular
Petit / Petite Small
Fort / Forte Strong
Irregular
Sportif / Sportive Athletic
Sérieux / Sérieuse Serious

The Agreement Decision Tree

1

Is the noun plural?

YES ↓
NO
Check Gender
2

Is it feminine?

YES ↓
NO
Add -s
3

Is it feminine plural?

YES ↓
NO
Add -es

Common Adjective Endings

Standard

  • -e
  • -s
  • -es

The 'X' Group

  • -eux
  • -euse
🏃

The 'F' Group

  • -if
  • -ive
💰

The 'ER' Group

  • -er
  • -ère

Preguntas frecuentes

22 preguntas

It is the rule that adjectives must change their form to match the gender and number of the noun they describe. For example, un petit chat becomes une petite chatte.

Most do, but some are 'invariable.' Words like marron (brown) or sympa (nice) stay the same regardless of the noun.

If the masculine form ends in an unaccented e, like rouge or facile, you don't add another one for the feminine form. It stays exactly the same.

Usually, you just add an s to the end. For example, vert becomes verts and verte becomes vertes.

In the masculine plural, adjectives ending in s or x do not change. So français remains français and vieux remains vieux.

The masculine plural always wins. Even if the group is mostly female, you would say Ils sont contents.

Yes, some colors derived from nouns like orange, marron, and citron never change. You would say des sacs orange without an 's'.

The f changes to a v before adding the e for the feminine. Actif becomes active.

The feminine form changes the eux to euse. For example, dangereux becomes dangereuse.

Very! The masculine is beau, the feminine is belle, the masculine plural is beaux, and the feminine plural is belles.

The es is almost always silent. Grandes sounds just like grande. The plural s is only heard if there is 'liaison' with the next word.

Yes! Even if the adjective is after the verb être, it must agree. Elle est grande needs the e.

It follows the same pattern as beau. Masculine is nouveau, feminine is nouvelle, and plural is nouveaux.

Yes. If you are talking about Marie, you say Marie est intelligente. If you talk about Paul, it's Paul est intelligent.

If on means 'we', the adjective usually agrees with the people it represents. On est fatigués (We are tired).

The concept is identical, but the specific letters are different. Spanish uses o/a while French uses default/e.

It's a legacy of Latin. Every object is categorized as masculine or feminine, and the adjectives must follow that lead.

Usually yes, because it's silent. But you must write it, and you must use liaison if the next word starts with a vowel.

Group them by family! Learn all the eux/euse words together and all the if/ive words together.

With people, it means 'tall'. With objects, it means 'big'. Either way, it must agree: une grande table.

People forget to double the 'n'. The feminine of bon is bonne.

Usually, adjectives after c'est stay masculine singular if they refer to a general idea. La cuisine, c'est génial!

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