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Asking Questions and Describing Things

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A2 questions_negation 6 min de leitura

Question Words - Qui, Que, Quoi

Use `qui` for people and `que` for things, but swap `que` for `quoi` at the sentence end.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use `qui` for people, no matter where it sits in the sentence.
  • Use `que` for things at the start of a question.
  • Change `que` to `quoi` after prepositions or at the end.
  • Use `qu'` before vowels to keep the sound smooth and elegant.

Quick Reference

Question Word Refers To Position Example
Qui People Anywhere Qui est-ce ?
Que Things Start Que fais-tu ?
Qu' Things Before Vowel Qu'as-tu ?
Quoi Things End / After Prep C'est quoi ?
À qui People Start / End À qui parles-tu ?
De quoi Things Start / End Tu parles de quoi ?

Exemplos-chave

3 de 10
1

Qui est à la porte ?

Who is at the door?

2

Qu'est-ce que tu manges ?

What are you eating?

3

À quoi penses-tu ?

What are you thinking about?

🎯

The 'Quoi' Rule

If you see a preposition like 'avec', 'pour', or 'sans', 'quoi' is almost always the answer. Think: 'With what' = 'Avec quoi'.

⚠️

Avoid the dangling 'Que'

Ending a sentence with 'que' is like leaving a high-five hanging. It's awkward. Always switch to 'quoi' at the finish line.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Use `qui` for people, no matter where it sits in the sentence.
  • Use `que` for things at the start of a question.
  • Change `que` to `quoi` after prepositions or at the end.
  • Use `qu'` before vowels to keep the sound smooth and elegant.

Overview

Asking questions is the heartbeat of any conversation. You cannot order a croissant or make a friend without them. In French, the big three are qui, que, and quoi. They are your keys to the city. Think of them as the "Who" and "What" of your French journey. Qui handles the people. Que and quoi handle the things. It sounds simple, right? Well, French likes to add a little flair to how these words move around. Sometimes they stay at the start. Sometimes they hop to the end. Don't worry, though. We are going to break it down simply. By the end of this, you will be questioning everything like a pro. Let's dive in and see how these words behave in the wild.

How This Grammar Works

At its core, this is about distinguishing between people and objects.

  • Use qui when you are asking about a person.
  • Use que or quoi when you are asking about a thing or an idea.

The real trick is where they sit in the sentence. Qui is very stable. It almost always stays as qui. Que is a bit of a chameleon. It changes to quoi depending on where it sits. It also changes to qu' before a vowel. Imagine que is the shy version that stays at the front. Quoi is the loud version that hangs out at the end or after a preposition. Yes, even native speakers get these mixed up when they are tired! Think of it like a grammar traffic light. Green means go with qui for people. Yellow means watch out for the position of que and quoi for things.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1There are three main ways to build these questions. You can choose based on how formal you want to be.
  2. 2The "Est-ce que" Method (Standard)
  3. 3Put the question word at the very beginning.
  4. 4Add est-ce que right after it.
  5. 5Finish with your subject and verb.
  6. 6Example: Qui est-ce que tu vois ? (Who do you see?)
  7. 7The Inversion Method (Formal)
  8. 8Put the question word at the beginning.
  9. 9Swap the subject and the verb.
  10. 10Connect them with a hyphen.
  11. 11Example: Que fais-tu ? (What are you doing?)
  12. 12The Casual Method (Informal)
  13. 13Keep the sentence like a normal statement.
  14. 14Put the question word at the end.
  15. 15Note: Que becomes quoi here!
  16. 16Example: Tu fais quoi ? (You're doing what?)

When To Use It

You will use these patterns every single day.

  • When you are at a job interview: Que savez-vous de notre entreprise ? (What do you know about our company?)
  • When you are meeting someone new: Qui est ton acteur préféré ? (Who is your favorite actor?)
  • When you are lost in Paris: C'est quoi, cette rue ? (What is this street?)

Qui works as both a subject (the person doing the action) and an object (the person receiving the action). This makes it very versatile. Que and quoi are almost always objects. Use them when you want to know about actions, objects, or concepts. If you're wondering what that weird smell in the fridge is, C'est quoi cette odeur ? is your best friend.

When Not To Use It

Don't use que at the end of a sentence. It sounds unfinished. It's like saying "What do you..." and then walking away. If you want the "what" at the end, it must be quoi.

Also, be careful not to confuse these with relative pronouns. In the sentence "The man who is tall," the "who" is a connector, not a question. We are focusing strictly on asking questions here.

Another trap is using quel. Use quel when you have a choice of specific items (Which one?). Use que/quoi for general "what" questions. If you ask Quel fais-tu ?, a French person might look at you like you just asked them to eat a shoe. Stick to Que fais-tu ? for general activities.

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake 1: Using que at the end.
  • Tu manges que ? (Wrong)
  • Tu manges quoi ? (Correct)
  • Mistake 2: Forgetting the apostrophe before a vowel.
  • Que est-ce que c'est ? (Wrong)
  • Qu'est-ce que c'est ? (Correct)
  • Mistake 3: Mixing up qui and que for people.
  • Que est là ? (Wrong - unless a ghost-thing is there!)
  • Qui est là ? (Correct - asking who is there)

Native speakers might drop the ne in casual speech, but they rarely mess up the que/quoi distinction. It's one of those things that marks you as a true student of the language. Just remember: quoi loves prepositions (avec, de, pour) and the end of the line.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

Qui vs Quel

Qui asks about a person's identity. Quel asks you to pick from a group.

  • Qui est ton prof ? (Who is your teacher?)
  • Quel prof as-tu ? (Which teacher do you have?)

Que vs Qu'est-ce qui

This is the boss level of French questions.

  • Qu'est-ce que... asks about the object (What are you eating?).
  • Qu'est-ce qui... asks about the subject (What is happening?).

Notice the qui at the end of the second one? That's because the "what" is the thing doing the action. It's like a grammar secret agent.

Quick FAQ

Q. Can I use qui for my dog?

A. Yes! If you treat them like a person, use qui. If it's just a creature, quoi might work, but qui is friendlier.

Q. Is quoi rude?

A. On its own, like "What?!", it can be a bit blunt. In a full sentence like Tu fais quoi ?, it is just casual and perfectly fine with friends.

Q. Why does que become qu'?

A. French hates it when two vowels hit each other. It's like a verbal car crash. The apostrophe is the air bag.

Q. Do I always need est-ce que?

A. No. You can use inversion or just change your tone of voice at the end. But est-ce que is the safest bet if you want to sound clear and correct.

Reference Table

Question Word Refers To Position Example
Qui People Anywhere Qui est-ce ?
Que Things Start Que fais-tu ?
Qu' Things Before Vowel Qu'as-tu ?
Quoi Things End / After Prep C'est quoi ?
À qui People Start / End À qui parles-tu ?
De quoi Things Start / End Tu parles de quoi ?
🎯

The 'Quoi' Rule

If you see a preposition like 'avec', 'pour', or 'sans', 'quoi' is almost always the answer. Think: 'With what' = 'Avec quoi'.

⚠️

Avoid the dangling 'Que'

Ending a sentence with 'que' is like leaving a high-five hanging. It's awkward. Always switch to 'quoi' at the finish line.

💬

The 'C'est qui?' vibe

In French movies, you'll hear 'C'est qui ?' constantly. It's much more common than the formal 'Qui est-ce ?' in daily life.

💡

The Vowel Rule

Remember: 'Que' and 'Quoi' are like water and oil with vowels. 'Que' becomes 'Qu'', but 'Quoi' stays 'Quoi' because it usually ends the sentence anyway.

Exemplos

10
#1 Basic Person

Qui est à la porte ?

Focus: Qui

Who is at the door?

Standard use of 'qui' as a subject.

#2 Basic Object

Qu'est-ce que tu manges ?

Focus: Qu'est-ce que

What are you eating?

The most common way to ask 'what' in standard French.

#3 Edge Case (Preposition)

À quoi penses-tu ?

Focus: À quoi

What are you thinking about?

After 'à', we must use 'quoi', not 'que'.

#4 Edge Case (Subject 'What')

Qu'est-ce qui se passe ?

Focus: Qu'est-ce qui

What is happening?

Here 'what' is the subject, so we use 'qui' at the end of the phrase.

#5 Formal

Que voulez-vous dire ?

Focus: Que

What do you mean?

Inversion makes this sound professional and polite.

#6 Informal

Tu veux quoi pour ton anniversaire ?

Focus: quoi

What do you want for your birthday?

Very common in spoken French with friends.

#7 Mistake Corrected

✗ Tu fais que ? → ✓ Tu fais quoi ?

Focus: quoi

What are you doing?

Never leave 'que' dangling at the end.

#8 Mistake Corrected

✗ Qui tu aimes ? → ✓ Qui est-ce que tu aimes ?

Focus: Qui est-ce que

Who do you love?

Adding 'est-ce que' makes the grammar complete.

#9 Advanced

Avec qui est-elle partie ?

Focus: Avec qui

With whom did she leave?

Preposition + 'qui' works exactly like English 'with whom'.

#10 Advanced

Quoi de neuf aujourd'hui ?

Focus: Quoi de neuf

What's new today?

A common idiom using 'quoi' + 'de'.

Teste-se

Choose the correct word to ask who is coming to the party.

___ vient à la fête ce soir ?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Qui

We use 'qui' for people. 'Que' and 'quoi' are for things.

Complete the casual question asking what someone is watching.

Tu regardes ___ ?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: quoi

At the end of a sentence, the object 'what' becomes 'quoi'.

Pick the right form for this formal question.

___ est votre film préféré ?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Quel

Wait! This is a trick. When asking 'What is...' followed by a noun, use 'quel' for specific identity.

🎉 Pontuação: /3

Recursos visuais

People vs. Things

Humains (Qui)
Qui est-ce ? Who is it?
C'est qui ? Who is it? (Casual)
Objets (Que/Quoi)
Que fais-tu ? What are you doing?
Tu fais quoi ? What are you doing? (Casual)

Choosing 'What'

1

Is it at the very start?

YES ↓
NO
Use 'Quoi'
2

Is it followed by a vowel?

YES ↓
NO
Use 'Que'
3

Action completed?

YES ↓
NO
Use 'Qu''

Register & Style

🎩

Formal

  • Que mangez-vous ?
  • Qui voyez-vous ?
😊

Standard

  • Qu'est-ce que vous mangez ?
  • Qui est-ce que vous voyez ?
🍕

Casual

  • Vous mangez quoi ?
  • Vous voyez qui ?

Perguntas frequentes

21 perguntas

'Qui' is for people (Who), and 'que' is for things (What). Use Qui est là ? for a person and Que fais-tu ? for an action.

'Que' becomes 'quoi' when it moves to the end of the sentence or follows a preposition. For example, Tu fais quoi ? or À quoi penses-tu ?.

No, 'qui' can be the subject or the object. You can say Qui est là ? (subject) or Qui vois-tu ? (object).

It is a standard way to signal a question is starting. It literally means 'What is it that...'. It's very common and safe to use.

Only if it is followed by a preposition or used in an exclamation. Quoi !? is common, as is De quoi tu parles ?.

No, Qu'est-ce qui is used when 'what' is the subject of the verb. Example: Qu'est-ce qui se passe ? (What is happening?).

Usually, 'qui' is used for pets or animals with a personality. If it's a general animal, 'que' is more common, like Qu'est-ce que c'est ? (What is it?).

If it is a silent 'H' (like homme), 'que' becomes 'qu''. Qu'honorez-vous ? is a bit formal, but the rule applies!

No, that is quite casual. In a formal context, use Qu'est-ce que c'est ? or the very formal Qu'est-ce ?.

Just put the preposition before 'qui'. Avec qui works perfectly. Example: Avec qui tu vas au cinéma ?.

Almost never. Unlike 'que', 'qui' remains 'qui' even before a vowel in questions. Say Qui est-ce ?, not Qu'est-ce ? for people.

It's a very common idiom meaning 'What's new?'. It's the French equivalent of 'What's up?' among friends.

Indirectly, yes. Pourquoi is literally pour (for) + quoi (what). So 'Why' is really just 'For what' in French logic!

Use À quoi. For example, À quoi sert ce bouton ? (What is this button for?).

Just say C'est qui ?. It's short, punchy, and everyone will understand you.

Only in the phrase Qu'est-ce qui, where the 'what' is the subject of the verb. It's a specific grammatical structure.

Yes, 'qui' doesn't change for plural. Qui sont ces gens ? (Who are these people?) is correct.

Neither is 'better', they just have different vibes. Tu fais quoi is like jeans and a t-shirt. Que fais-tu is like a suit.

Use À qui. À qui est ce livre ? literally means 'To whom is this book?' which translates to 'Whose book is this?'.

Not at all. Inversion is becoming rarer in spoken French. Most people use est-ce que or just rising intonation.

No, that's 'tout'. 'Quoi' is strictly for questions or relative clauses like 'I don't know what'.

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