Language/French/Grammar/Weather-verbs
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Revision as of 17:18, 2 December 2021 by Vincent (talk | contribs) (→Impersonal use of the verb "faire")
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Weather verbs
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Impersonal verbs
Most verbs are personal: they must be conjugated to different people, such as "manger" (to eat): je mange (I eat), tu manges (you eat), etc.
However, some verbs are used impersonaly, meaning they only have one conjugation, the third person singular.
Impersonal weather verbs
The best-known group of impersonal verbs describe the weather:
| French | Translation |
|---|---|
| II pleut | It's raining |
| Il pleut des cordes | It's raining cats and dogs |
| Il grêle | It's sleeting |
| Il neige | It's snowing |
| Il vente | It's windy |
| Il tonne | There's thunder about |
| Il bruine | It's drizzling |
Impersonal use of the verb "faire"
The weather conditions can be expressed by an impersonal use of "faire" followed by an adjective or a noun:
| French | Translation |
|---|---|
| Il fait beau | Weather is good |
| Il fait mauvais (Il fait un mauvais temps) / Il fait moche (coloquial) | Weather is bad |
| Il fait soleil | It's sunny |
| Il fait chaud | It's hot |
| Il fait lourd | The weather is oppressive |
| Il fait sec | It's very dry |
| Il fait humide | It's very humid |
| Il fait du brouillard | It's foggy |
| Il fait de l'orage (orageux) | It's stormy |
| Il fait un froid de canard | It's very cold |
