A1/A2 French Grammar Roadmap

French Grammar
in One Long Read

A colorful, compact grammar page for learners who want the complete beginner structure of French in one place: nouns, articles, adjectives, pronouns, verbs, tenses, questions, negation, prepositions and sentence building.

How to use this page: read one section at a time, look at the formula, compare the French and English examples, then continue. No quizzes, no workbook exercises, only grammar rules and clear examples.
1. Buildpresentatives, nouns and articles
2. Describeadjectives, quantity and comparison
3. Pronounssubject, object and relative pronouns
4. Timepresent, past and future forms
5. Connectquestions, negation and complex sentences

1. Presenting People and Things

French uses short presentation structures to introduce a person, show something, or say that something exists.

👋voici / voilà

Here is / there is

Use voici and voilà to introduce someone or point to something.

voici = here isvoilà = there is / here is+ name
Voici Pedro.Here is Pedro.
Voilà mes collègues.There are my colleagues.
c’est / ce sont

It is / they are

Use c’est before a singular noun and ce sont before a plural noun.

C’est une interprète.She is an interpreter.
Ce sont des étudiants.They are students.
📍il y a

There is / there are

Use il y a to say that something exists or is present.

Il y a une réunion.There is a meeting.
Il y a des livres.There are books.

2. Nouns: Gender and Plural

French nouns have gender and number. Learn the article together with the noun because it carries the grammar signal.

🔵masculine / feminine

Masculine and feminine nouns

Many feminine nouns add -e. Some endings transform: -er → -ère, -ien → -ienne, -eur → -euse, -teur → -trice.

Masculine + EnglishFeminine + EnglishPattern
un étudiant
a male student
une étudiante
a female student
+ e
un boulanger
a baker
une boulangère
a baker
-er → -ère
un danseur
a male dancer
une danseuse
a female dancer
-eur → -euse
un directeur
a male director
une directrice
a female director
-teur → -trice
Remember: some words are completely different: un homme → une femme, un père → une mère, un frère → une sœur.
🍎singular / plural

Singular and plural nouns

The usual plural ending is -s. Some nouns take -x, some change to -aux, and nouns ending in -s, -x, -z do not change.

Singular + EnglishPlural + EnglishRule
un fruit
a fruit
des fruits
fruits / some fruits
+ s
un gâteau
a cake
des gâteaux
cakes / some cakes
-eau → -eaux
un travail
a job / work
des travaux
works / jobs
-ail → -aux
un prix
a price / prize
des prix
prices / prizes
no change
un œil
an eye
des yeux
eyes
irregular

3. Articles and Determiners

Articles and determiners are small words before nouns. They show if you mean a thing, the thing, some of something, this, my, or a quantity.

📘un / une / des

Indefinite articles

Use these for a/an or some.

un chata cat
une maisona house
des amissome friends
🎯le / la / l’ / les

Definite articles

Use these for the or when speaking about something in general.

le livrethe book
l’écolethe school
J’aime le français.I like French.
🥖du / de la / de l’

Partitive articles

Use these for an unknown amount, especially food and drink. English often uses no word here.

Je mange du pain.I eat bread / some bread.
Je bois de l’eau.I drink water / some water.
🚫negative articles

After negation: de

After many negative sentences, un, une, des, du, de la, de l’ become de.

J’ai du pain.I have bread.
Je n’ai pas de pain.I do not have any bread.
🔗au / aux / du / des

Contracted articles

French contracts some combinations with à and de.

CombinationResult + EnglishExample + English
à + leau
to the / at the
au cinéma
to the cinema
à + lesaux
to the / at the
aux étudiants
to the students
de + ledu
from the / of the
du professeur
from the teacher / teacher’s
de + lesdes
from the / of the
des enfants
from the children / children’s
👉ce / cette / cet / ces

Demonstrative adjectives

Use these for this, that, these, those.

ce livrethis book
cette maisonthis house
cet amithis friend
ces enfantsthese children

Possessives and quantity

Use possessive adjectives to show possession. Use quantity words to say each, many, or none.

mon livre = my bookma maison = my housemes amis = my friendston livre = your booksa sœur = his/her sisternotre classe = our classchaque jour = every daybeaucoup de livres = many booksaucune réponse = no answer

4. Adjectives

Adjectives describe nouns. In French, many adjectives change for masculine, feminine, singular and plural.

🎨agreement

Adjective agreement

The adjective usually matches the noun. Feminine often adds -e. Plural often adds -s.

Masculine + EnglishFeminine + EnglishPlural + English
petit
small
petite
small
petits / petites
small, plural
grand
big / tall
grande
big / tall
grands / grandes
big / tall, plural
heureux
happy
heureuse
happy
heureux / heureuses
happy, plural
nouveau
new
nouvelle
new
nouveaux / nouvelles
new, plural
📌position

Position of adjectives

Most adjectives come after the noun. Some very common adjectives often come before the noun.

une voiture rougea red car
un jour spéciala special day
un bon gâteaua good cake
une petite maisona small house
Common before-noun adjectives: bon, mauvais, petit, grand, joli, jeune, vieux, nouveau.

5. Pronouns

Pronouns replace nouns and help avoid repetition. French pronouns have a strict place in the sentence.

👤subjects

Subject pronouns

Subject pronouns show who does the action.

je = Itu = youil = he / itelle = she / iton = one / wenous = wevous = youils = theyelles = they
Je parle français.I speak French.
💬tonic

Stress pronouns

Use them after prepositions or for emphasis.

moi = metoi = yoului = himelle = hernous = usvous = youeux = themelles = them
Avec moi.With me.
🔎relative

Relative pronouns

Use qui, que, and to connect information about a person, thing, place or time.

C’est l’homme qui parle.He is the man who is speaking.
Le livre que je lis.The book that I am reading.
La ville où j’habite.The city where I live.
👉demonstrative

Demonstrative pronouns

Use these for the one / the ones.

celui = the onecelle = the oneceux = the onescelles = the onescelui-ci = this onecelle-là = that one
Je préfère celui-ci.I prefer this one.
🎯COD

Direct object pronouns

They replace the direct object: me = me, te = you, le/la/l’ = him/her/it, nous = us, vous = you, les = them, en = some/of it.

Je vois le chat. → Je le vois.I see the cat. → I see it.
Je veux du pain. → J’en veux.I want bread. → I want some.
➡️COI

Indirect object pronouns

They often replace à + person: me = to me, te = to you, lui = to him/her, nous = to us, vous = to you, leur = to them, y = there.

Je parle à Marie. → Je lui parle.I speak to Marie. → I speak to her.
Je vais à Paris. → J’y vais.I am going to Paris. → I am going there.

Pronoun position

In a simple sentence, most object pronouns come before the conjugated verb. With an infinitive, they often come before the infinitive.

Je le vois.I see him / it.
Je vais le voir.I am going to see him / it.
Ne me parle pas.Do not speak to me.
Donne-le-moi.Give it to me.

6. Verbs and Tenses

French verbs change with the subject and the time. Master the key forms first: present, near future, recent past, passé composé, imparfait and future.

🔥present 1

Essential irregular verbs

Start with the most useful verbs.

être: je suis = to be: I amavoir: j’ai = to have: I havealler: je vais = to go: I gofaire: je fais = to do/make: I do
🌱present 2

-er verbs and reflexive verbs

Many common verbs follow the -er pattern. Reflexive verbs use me, te, se….

je parle, tu parles, il parleI speak, you speak, he speaks
ils se disputentthey argue
🧠present 3

Common irregular verbs

Learn high-frequency verbs as families.

vouloir = to wantpouvoir = to be able to / candevoir = must / to have tosavoir = to knowpartir = to leavevenir = to comeoffrir = to offerattendre = to waitboire = to drinkécrire = to write
near future / recent past

aller + infinitive / venir de + infinitive

Use aller + infinitive for the near future and venir de + infinitive for the recent past.

Je vais partir.I am going to leave.
Je viens de rentrer.I have just come back.
passé composé

Passé composé with avoir

Most verbs use avoir + past participle.

subjectavoir = to havepast participle
Elle a dit la vérité.She told the truth.
🚶passé composé

Passé composé with être

Some movement verbs and reflexive verbs use être + past participle. The participle often agrees with the subject.

Tu es allé.You went.
Vous vous êtes perdus.You got lost.
🌫️imparfait

Imparfait

Use the imparfait for background, habits, descriptions and ongoing past situations.

Je m’ennuyais.I was bored.
Elle cuisinait souvent.She often cooked.
🎬past contrast

Imparfait vs passé composé

Use imparfait for the scene and passé composé for completed events.

Je dormais quand il est arrivé.I was sleeping when he arrived.
🔮future simple

Future simple

The future simple often uses the infinitive base plus future endings.

-ai = I will-as = you will-a = he/she will-ons = we will-ez = you will-ont = they will
Vous habiterez à Paris.You will live in Paris.

7. Moods: Imperative, Conditional, Subjunctive

French uses special verb moods to give orders, be polite, imagine conditions or express necessity and emotion.

📣imperative

Imperative

Use the imperative to give instructions or advice.

Allons-y !Let’s go!
Ne m’attendez pas.Do not wait for me.
🤝conditional

Conditional present

Use the conditional for polite requests and imagined situations.

Je voudrais un café.I would like a coffee.
Vous aimeriez partir ?Would you like to leave?
🌀subjunctive

Subjunctive present

Use the subjunctive after certain expressions of wish, need, emotion or uncertainty.

Il faut qu’on parte.We have to leave.
Je veux que tu prennes le train.I want you to take the train.

8. Prepositions and Adverbs

Prepositions connect nouns to places and ideas. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives or whole sentences.

📍place

Prepositions of place

Use à, au, à la, aux, de, du, de la, des, en with places and directions.

Je vais au cinéma.I am going to the cinema.
Elle vient de France.She comes from France.
Il habite en Espagne.He lives in Spain.
🧲verbs + prepositions

Verbs with à or de

Some verbs naturally take a preposition. Learn the verb together with its preposition.

penser à = to think of/aboutparler à = to speak totéléphoner à = to phone/calloublier de = to forget toessayer de = to try toavoir besoin de = to need
Je pense à toi.I am thinking of you.
🎚️adverbs

Meaning and position of adverbs

Adverbs can express intensity, quantity, manner or evaluation.

très = veryassez = quite / enoughbeaucoup = a lotbien = wellmal = badlytrop = too much / too
Elle parle bien.She speaks well.
Il est très gentil.He is very kind.
⚖️comparatives

Comparisons

Use plus… que, moins… que, aussi… que, meilleur and mieux.

Il est plus grand que moi.He is taller than me.
Elle chante mieux.She sings better.
C’est un meilleur livre.It is a better book.

9. Sentence Types and Complex Sentences

Use negation, questions and connectors to turn simple sentences into real communication.

🚫negation

Negation

Put ne before the verb and the second negative word after the verb.

Je ne sais pas.I do not know.
Je ne mange plus.I do not eat anymore.
Je ne vois rien.I see nothing.
questions

Interrogation patterns

Use intonation, est-ce que, or inversion. Use question words to ask for details.

qui ? = who?quand ? = when?où ? = where?quoi ? = what?comment ? = how?pourquoi ? = why?combien ? = how much / how many?quel ? = which / what?lequel ? = which one?
Est-ce que tu aimes le français ?Do you like French?
🗣️reported speech

Indirect speech

Use dire que, demander si, and demander où/quand/comment to report what someone says or asks.

Il dit qu’il arrive.He says that he is arriving.
Il me demande où j’habite.He asks me where I live.
🔗connectors

Cause, consequence, purpose, opposition

Use connectors to explain why, show results, say purpose or create contrast.

parce que = becausedonc = so / thereforepour = to / formais = but
Je mange parce que j’ai faim.I eat because I am hungry.
Je lis pour apprendre.I read to learn.
🌦️condition

Condition with si

Use si to express a condition.

Si tu veux, on part maintenant.If you want, we leave now.
S’il y a du temps, je viendrai.If there is time, I will come.
🏗️sentence building

Simple sentence formula

Most beginner French sentences can start from a clear structure.

subjectverbobjectplace / time
Je mange une pomme à la maison.I eat an apple at home.