Negation - Ne...Personne (Nobody)
Replace 'pas' with 'personne' to negate people, placing it after the full verb phrase or at the start.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use 'ne...personne' to say 'nobody' or 'no one' in French.
- Place 'ne' before the verb and 'personne' after the verb.
- In compound tenses, 'personne' goes after the past participle.
- It can also be the subject: 'Personne ne' + verb.
Quick Reference
| Role | Structure | Example | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| Object | ne + verb + personne | Je ne vois personne. | I see nobody. |
| Subject | Personne ne + verb | Personne ne vient. | Nobody is coming. |
| Passé Composé | ne + aux + p.p. + personne | Je n'ai vu personne. | I saw nobody. |
| Infinitive | ne ... personne | Ne voir personne est triste. | To see no one is sad. |
| With Preposition | ne + verb + prep + personne | Je ne parle à personne. | I speak to no one. |
| Short Answer | Personne | Qui est là ? Personne. | Who is there? Nobody. |
主な例文
3 / 8Je ne connais personne ici.
I don't know anyone here.
Personne ne sait la réponse.
Nobody knows the answer.
Il n'a écouté personne.
He listened to nobody.
The Double Negative Trap
Never use 'pas' and 'personne' together. It's like adding two negatives in math; it confuses the meaning!
Passé Composé Placement
Remember: 'personne' is long and heavy, so it falls to the very end of the sentence after the past participle.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Use 'ne...personne' to say 'nobody' or 'no one' in French.
- Place 'ne' before the verb and 'personne' after the verb.
- In compound tenses, 'personne' goes after the past participle.
- It can also be the subject: 'Personne ne' + verb.
Overview
Imagine walking into a silent cafe. You look for a waiter. You see no one. In French, you need ne...personne. It means "nobody" or "no one". It is a negative pronoun. It helps you describe empty spaces. It helps you describe lonely moments. It is essential for A2 learners. You will use it every day. It is like the ghost of French grammar. It represents the absence of people. Think of it as a specialized tool. It is much more specific than ne...pas. It only deals with humans. Yes, even your French teacher had to learn this once. It is a very powerful way to speak. You will sound much more natural using it.
How This Grammar Works
Most negation uses the ne...pas sandwich. Think of ne...pas as the default setting. Personne replaces the pas in that sandwich. You cannot use both together. That would be like wearing two hats. It just looks weird to native speakers. Personne is more specific than pas. It only refers to people. It functions as a pronoun. This means it takes the place of a noun. It can be the object of your sentence. It can even be the subject. It is very flexible and useful. It is like a grammar traffic light. It tells the listener exactly who is missing.
Formation Pattern
- 1Find your subject like
JeorTu. - 2Add the negative particle
neafter the subject. - 3Add your conjugated verb.
- 4Finish with
personneat the end. - 5Example:
Je ne connais personne(I know nobody). - 6Wait! There is a second way to do this.
- 7
Personnecan be the subject of the sentence. - 8Start the sentence with
Personne. - 9Add the particle
neimmediately after. - 10Add your conjugated verb.
- 11Example:
Personne ne m'écoute(Nobody is listening to me). - 12Notice the verb is always singular. Treat
personnelikeilorelle. It is simpler than it looks!
When To Use It
Use it when the count of people is zero. Use it to answer the question "Who?". "Who is in the car?" "Nobody is in the car." Use it in professional settings. "No one signed the contract today." Use it in social settings. "I don't know anyone at this party." It works for "anybody" in negative English sentences. "I don't see anybody here." It is perfect for mystery novels. "Nobody saw the thief leave." Use it when you feel lonely. "Nobody called me on my birthday." It is a very emotional and practical word.
When Not To Use It
Do not use it for objects. If you lost your keys, use rien. Personne is strictly for humans. Do not use it with pas. Je ne vois pas personne is a mistake. It sounds like "I don't see not nobody." Your French friends might giggle at that. Do not use it for "none of them." That requires a different word called aucun. Keep it simple for now. Only use it for "no one" in general. Do not use it to mean "a person." Without the ne, it is just a normal noun. Context is everything in French grammar.
Common Mistakes
The biggest trap is the Passé Composé. Usually, pas goes after the auxiliary verb. Je n'ai pas mangé. But personne is a bit of a rebel. It goes after the past participle. Je n'ai vu personne. Many people say Je n'ai personne vu. That is a grammar traffic jam. Another mistake is forgetting the ne. In writing, ne is mandatory. In speaking, people often drop it. But you should learn the rule first. Think of ne as the anchor. Without it, the sentence might float away. Also, remember that personne is always singular. Don't try to make the verb plural.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Ne...pas is the general "not". Ne...rien is for "nothing". Ne...personne is for "nobody". Ne...jamais is for "never". Personne is unique because it moves around. Rien and pas stay near the auxiliary verb. Personne likes to travel to the end. Think of personne as a social butterfly. It wants to be where the people were. It occupies the space of the missing person. Rien is for things you can touch. Personne is for hearts and souls. Understanding this difference is a huge win. You are making great progress already!
Quick FAQ
Q. Is personne always masculine?
A. Yes, grammatically it is always masculine.
Q. Can I use it with jamais?
A. Yes! Je ne vois jamais personne (I never see anyone).
Q. Does it mean "a person"?
A. Yes, but only without the ne particle.
Q. Can I say it alone?
A. Yes, in short answers like "Who's there?" "Personne."
Reference Table
| Role | Structure | Example | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| Object | ne + verb + personne | Je ne vois personne. | I see nobody. |
| Subject | Personne ne + verb | Personne ne vient. | Nobody is coming. |
| Passé Composé | ne + aux + p.p. + personne | Je n'ai vu personne. | I saw nobody. |
| Infinitive | ne ... personne | Ne voir personne est triste. | To see no one is sad. |
| With Preposition | ne + verb + prep + personne | Je ne parle à personne. | I speak to no one. |
| Short Answer | Personne | Qui est là ? Personne. | Who is there? Nobody. |
The Double Negative Trap
Never use 'pas' and 'personne' together. It's like adding two negatives in math; it confuses the meaning!
Passé Composé Placement
Remember: 'personne' is long and heavy, so it falls to the very end of the sentence after the past participle.
Dropping the 'Ne'
In casual French cafes, you'll hear 'J'vois personne.' They drop the 'ne' to speak faster, but keep it in your exams!
Singular Only
Treat 'personne' like a single person (il/elle). Even if you mean 'nobody' out of a million people, the verb stays singular.
例文
8Je ne connais personne ici.
Focus: ne connais personne
I don't know anyone here.
Standard placement in the present tense.
Personne ne sait la réponse.
Focus: Personne ne sait
Nobody knows the answer.
Here, 'personne' acts as the subject of the sentence.
Il n'a écouté personne.
Focus: n'a écouté personne
He listened to nobody.
Notice 'personne' comes after the past participle 'écouté'.
Elle ne pense à personne.
Focus: à personne
She is thinking of no one.
The preposition 'à' stays with 'personne'.
Je vois personne.
Focus: vois personne
I see no one.
In casual speech, the 'ne' is often dropped.
✗ Je ne vois pas personne. → ✓ Je ne vois personne.
Focus: ne vois personne
I don't see anyone.
Never use 'pas' and 'personne' together.
✗ Je n'ai personne vu. → ✓ Je n'ai vu personne.
Focus: vu personne
I saw nobody.
Unlike 'pas', 'personne' follows the past participle.
Personne ne dit jamais rien.
Focus: Personne ne dit jamais rien
Nobody ever says anything.
You can combine multiple negative words in one sentence!
自分をテスト
Complete the sentence to say 'I don't see anyone'.
Je ___ vois ___.
To say 'anyone' in a negative sense, use 'ne...personne'.
Choose the correct subject form for 'Nobody is here'.
___ ___ est ici.
'Personne' is the subject meaning 'nobody', followed by 'ne'.
Correct the word order for 'I heard no one'.
Je n'ai ___ ___.
In compound tenses, 'personne' follows the past participle.
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ビジュアル学習ツール
Pas vs. Personne
Choosing Your Negative
Are you negating a person?
Is the person the subject?
Result
Placement by Tense
Present Tense
- • Je ne vois personne
Passé Composé
- • Je n'ai vu personne
よくある質問
22 問It means 'nobody', 'no one', or 'anybody' (in negative contexts). For example, Je ne vois personne means 'I see nobody'.
The ne always goes before the conjugated verb. If the verb starts with a vowel, it becomes n' like in Il n'aime personne.
No, never use them together. Personne replaces the pas entirely in the negative structure.
In English, 'no one' and 'nobody' are the same. In French, personne covers both of these meanings perfectly.
Put it at the start: Personne ne + verb. For example, Personne ne sait means 'Nobody knows'.
It goes after the verb in simple tenses. Je ne connais personne is the standard object structure.
It goes after the past participle. You say Je n'ai vu personne, not Je n'ai personne vu.
It usually follows the infinitive. For example, Je ne veux voir personne means 'I don't want to see anyone'.
Rien is for things (nothing), while personne is for people (nobody). You wouldn't call your friend a 'thing', right?
Usually, you choose one or the other. Aucun means 'none of them', while personne is 'no one' in general.
No, that is grammatically incorrect. The ne...personne structure is complete on its own.
As a negative pronoun, it is grammatically masculine. Even if you are talking about a group of women, the verb stays in the masculine singular form.
Yes! If someone asks 'Who is there?', you can simply answer Personne.
No, personne is always singular. You never add an 's' to it in this context.
Yes, but it gets complicated. Stick to Je ne vois ni Paul ni Marie for 'neither...nor'.
Yes, in informal speech, people say Je vois personne. It is very common in daily life.
Prepositions go right before personne. For example: Je ne parle à personne (I am talking to no one).
Yes! Il ne voit jamais personne means 'He never sees anyone'. French loves stacking negatives.
Yes, putting it before the past participle is the most common error. Just remember it likes the end of the sentence!
In English, we say 'I don't see anybody'. In French, that 'anybody' becomes personne because the sentence is negative.
No, une personne is a noun meaning 'a person'. Personne without an article is the negative pronoun.
Think of personne as a real person who walks to the very end of the sentence to sit down.
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