Subjonctif après "il faut que"
Always use the subjunctive after `il faut que` to tell someone what they must do.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use `il faut que` to express necessity for a specific person.
- The word `que` always triggers the subjunctive mood in the next verb.
- Form it by taking the `ils` present stem and adding subjunctive endings.
- If there is no `que`, use the infinitive instead of the subjunctive.
Quick Reference
| Subject | Regular Stem (Parler) | Subjunctive Ending | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|
| que je | parl- | -e | Il faut que je parle. |
| que tu | parl- | -es | Il faut que tu parles. |
| qu'il/elle | parl- | -e | Il faut qu'elle parle. |
| que nous | parl- | -ions | Il faut que nous parlions. |
| que vous | parl- | -iez | Il faut que vous parliez. |
| qu'ils/elles | parl- | -ent | Il faut qu'elles parlent. |
Ejemplos clave
3 de 9Il faut que tu finisses tes devoirs.
You must finish your homework.
Il faut que nous partions à huit heures.
We must leave at eight o'clock.
Il faut que vous fassiez attention.
You must pay attention.
The 'Ils' Trick
Always go to the 'ils' form of the present tense first. If you can conjugate 'ils dorment', you can do the subjunctive 'que je dorme'!
The 'Que' Glue
Never drop the 'que'. In English, we often say 'I must go' without a connector. In French, 'que' is the glue that holds the necessity to the person.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use `il faut que` to express necessity for a specific person.
- The word `que` always triggers the subjunctive mood in the next verb.
- Form it by taking the `ils` present stem and adding subjunctive endings.
- If there is no `que`, use the infinitive instead of the subjunctive.
Overview
Welcome to the world of the French subjunctive! This sounds scary. It really isn't. Think of il faut que as a special key. It unlocks a new way of speaking. In English, we say "It is necessary that..." or "I must...". In French, we use il faut que. This phrase is very common. You will hear it in cafes. You will hear it at work. It is the most popular way to express obligation. But there is a catch. It requires a special verb form. We call this the subjunctive mood. It sounds fancy. It is just a different conjugation. You already know how to conjugate verbs. This is just one more pattern to learn. Don't worry about the "mood" part yet. Just focus on the trigger. When you say il faut que, the next verb changes. It is like a grammar traffic light. The light turns yellow. You must prepare for the subjunctive.
How This Grammar Works
French has different "moods." The indicative is for facts. The subjunctive is for feelings or needs. Il faut que expresses a need. It is not a fact yet. It is something that should happen. This is why we use the subjunctive. The structure is simple. You start with il faut que. Then you add a subject. This could be tu, nous, or Marie. Finally, you add the subjunctive verb. Without the que, the rule changes. If you just say il faut, you use an infinitive. For example, il faut manger. But with a specific person, you need the que. Il faut que tu manges. It creates a bridge. The bridge leads straight to the subjunctive. Think of it like a required pairing. Like coffee and croissants. You rarely have one without the other in this context.
Formation Pattern
- 1Creating the subjunctive is like a recipe. You only need three steps for most verbs.
- 2Start with the
ilsform of the present tense. Forparler, this isils parlent. - 3Remove the
-entending. Now you have the stem:parl-. - 4Add the special subjunctive endings.
- 5These endings are mostly familiar:
- 6For
je, add-e. - 7For
tu, add-es. - 8For
il/elle/on, add-e. - 9For
nous, add-ions. - 10For
vous, add-iez. - 11For
ils/elles, add-ent. - 12Wait, these look like regular
-erendings! You are right. For many verbs, the subjunctive looks like the present. But for-irand-reverbs, it looks different. For example,finirbecomesfinissentin theilsform. The stem isfiniss-. So,il faut que tu finisses. It sounds more rhythmic. Some verbs are rebels. They are irregular. You must memorizeêtre,avoir,faire, andaller. They don't follow theilsrule. They like to be special.
When To Use It
Use this when something is mandatory. Imagine you are at a job interview. The boss says, Il faut que vous parliez anglais. It is a requirement. Or imagine you are lost. You ask for directions. A local says, Il faut que vous tourniez à gauche. They are giving you a strong instruction. You can also use it for advice. If a friend is sick, say Il faut que tu ailles chez le médecin. It shows you care. It adds weight to your words. In a restaurant, a waiter might say, Il faut que vous choisissiez maintenant. The kitchen is closing! It is used for deadlines. It is used for rules. It is the language of "must."
When Not To Use It
Do not use the subjunctive for general statements. If you mean "One must eat to live," use the infinitive. Say Il faut manger pour vivre. There is no specific person here. No que means no subjunctive. Also, do not use it for simple facts. If you are just saying "I am eating," use the indicative. Je mange. The subjunctive needs a trigger. Il faut que is that trigger. If the trigger is missing, keep it simple. Don't overcomplicate your life. Even native speakers sometimes use the infinitive to avoid the subjunctive. It is a clever shortcut. But to sound truly French, you need the que version.
Common Mistakes
The biggest mistake is using the regular present tense. People say Il faut que tu vas. This is wrong. It should be Il faut que tu ailles. Another mistake is forgetting the que. Il faut tu pars sounds very broken. Always keep the que as the glue. Sometimes learners forget the i in nous and vous. They say il faut que nous parlons. No! It must be il faut que nous parlions. That little i is very important. It signals the subjunctive. Finally, don't use it with je too often. Il faut que je parte is fine. But Je dois partir is often easier. Don't force it if it feels clunky.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
You might know je dois. This also means "I must." Je dois partir is simple. It uses the infinitive. Il faut que je parte is more formal. It is also more emphatic. Il faut que sounds more like an external rule. Je dois sounds more like a personal choice. Think of il faut que as a sign on the wall. Think of je dois as a voice in your head. There is also il est nécessaire que. This is very formal. You might see it in a contract. In daily life, stick to il faut que. It is the perfect balance of polite and direct.
Quick FAQ
Q. Is it always il faut?
A. Yes, it is an impersonal expression. You never say je faut or tu faut.
Q. Can I use it for the past?
A. Yes, you can say il fallait que. But that is for another day.
Q. Do I use it with on?
A. Absolutely. Il faut qu'on y aille is very common. It means "We must go."
Q. Why does French have this?
A. It adds nuance. It separates reality from necessity. It makes the language beautiful.
Q. Is it okay to make mistakes?
A. Yes! Even French kids struggle with this. Just keep practicing. You will get it.
Reference Table
| Subject | Regular Stem (Parler) | Subjunctive Ending | Example Sentence |
|---|---|---|---|
| que je | parl- | -e | Il faut que je parle. |
| que tu | parl- | -es | Il faut que tu parles. |
| qu'il/elle | parl- | -e | Il faut qu'elle parle. |
| que nous | parl- | -ions | Il faut que nous parlions. |
| que vous | parl- | -iez | Il faut que vous parliez. |
| qu'ils/elles | parl- | -ent | Il faut qu'elles parlent. |
The 'Ils' Trick
Always go to the 'ils' form of the present tense first. If you can conjugate 'ils dorment', you can do the subjunctive 'que je dorme'!
The 'Que' Glue
Never drop the 'que'. In English, we often say 'I must go' without a connector. In French, 'que' is the glue that holds the necessity to the person.
The 'i' Factor
For 'nous' and 'vous', the subjunctive looks exactly like the 'imparfait'. If it sounds like the past but you're talking about now, you're probably doing it right!
Polite Pressure
Using 'il faut que' is very common in French culture to give advice without sounding too bossy. It's like saying 'The situation requires this' rather than 'I command you'.
Ejemplos
9Il faut que tu finisses tes devoirs.
Focus: finisses
You must finish your homework.
Uses the stem from 'ils finissent'.
Il faut que nous partions à huit heures.
Focus: partions
We must leave at eight o'clock.
Notice the 'i' in the ending for 'nous'.
Il faut que vous fassiez attention.
Focus: fassiez
You must pay attention.
'Faire' has a completely irregular subjunctive stem.
Il faut que je sois à l'heure.
Focus: sois
I must be on time.
'Être' is highly irregular in the subjunctive.
Il faut que le client signe ici.
Focus: signe
The client must sign here.
Standard third-person subjunctive usage.
Il faut qu'on achète du pain.
Focus: achète
We must buy some bread.
'On' is used frequently with this structure in spoken French.
✗ Il faut que tu vas → ✓ Il faut que tu ailles.
Focus: ailles
You must go.
Don't use the indicative 'vas' after 'que'.
✗ Il faut que nous mangeons → ✓ Il faut que nous mangions.
Focus: mangions
We must eat.
The 'i' is required for the 'nous' subjunctive form.
Il faut que vous sachiez la vérité.
Focus: sachiez
You must know the truth.
'Savoir' becomes 'sache-' in the subjunctive.
Ponte a prueba
Complete the sentence with the correct subjunctive form of 'vendre'.
Il faut que vous ___ votre voiture.
The 'vous' form of the subjunctive for 'vendre' adds '-iez' to the stem 'vend-'.
Choose the correct irregular form for 'faire'.
Il faut que tu ___ du sport.
'Faire' is irregular; its subjunctive stem is 'fass-'.
Identify the correct structure for a general necessity (no specific person).
Il faut ___ de l'eau tous les jours.
Without a specific person or 'que', we use the infinitive 'boire'.
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Ayudas visuales
General vs. Specific Necessity
Should I use the Subjunctive?
Is there a 'que' after 'il faut'?
Is the verb regular?
Apply 'ils' stem + endings
Common Subjunctive Stems
Regular Stems
- • parl- (parler)
- • finiss- (finir)
- • vend- (vendre)
Irregular Stems
- • fass- (faire)
- • aill- (aller)
- • soit- (être)
Preguntas frecuentes
20 preguntasIt translates to 'it is necessary that' or 'it must be that'. In practice, we use it to say 'you must' or 'I need to' followed by a specific action.
No, 'il faut' is impersonal. You can never say je faut or tu faut; the 'il' is a dummy subject like the 'it' in 'it is raining'.
Because il faut que expresses necessity or obligation, which is one of the primary triggers for the subjunctive mood in French.
Yes, you can say je dois partir instead of il faut que je parte. Both are correct, but il faut que is extremely common in spoken French.
Take the ils form, drop -ent, and add -e, -es, -e, -ions, -iez, -ent. For parler, it looks like que tu parles.
Use the ils form finissent. The stem is finiss-, so you say il faut que tu finisses.
No, the subjunctive is for things that are subjective, necessary, or uncertain. Facts use the indicative mood.
You must know être (sois), avoir (aie), faire (fasse), and aller (aille). These appear constantly with il faut que.
Yes! If you don't specify a person, use the infinitive: il faut manger. This means 'one must eat' in general.
The sentence will sound broken and confusing to a native speaker. The que is essential to link the necessity to the subject.
Yes, il faut qu'on... is very common in casual speech. For example, il faut qu'on y aille means 'we've got to go'.
Not at all! You will hear il faut que in every casual conversation in France. It is a core part of the language.
Use il ne faut pas que. For example, il ne faut pas que tu oublies means 'you must not forget'.
That 'i' (as in parlions) is the marker of the subjunctive for 'nous' and 'vous'. It helps distinguish it from the present tense.
Yes, in phrases like 'It is essential that he **be** here'. We just don't use it as often as the French do.
The subjunctive doesn't have a future tense. You use the present subjunctive to talk about things that need to happen soon.
The ils form is prennent, so the stem is prenn-. You say il faut que tu prennes.
It can, but it's often softer than a direct command. It's like saying 'it's necessary' rather than 'do it!'
Try making a list of 5 things you must do today using il faut que je.... It's a great daily habit.
Most irregulars have a stem that ends in 's' or 't'. For example, faire -> fass- and pouvoir -> puiss-.
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