Thursday, March 12, 2020
French Prepositions with Geographical Names
French Prepositions with Geographical Names Deciding which Frenchà prepositionà to use with countries, cities, and otherà geographical namesà can be somewhat confusing, at least until now! This lesson will explain which prepositions to use and why. Gendered Nouns Like all Frenchà nouns, geographical names like countries, states, and provinces have aà gender. Knowing the gender of each geographical name is the first step in determining which preposition to use. As a general guideline, geographical names which end inà eà areà feminine, while those that end in any other letter are masculine. There are, of course, exceptions which simply have to be memorized. See the individual lessons for explanations of the gender of each geographical name. Examples In English, we use three different prepositions with geographical names, depending on what we are trying to say. Je vaisà enà FranceIm goingà toà FranceJe suisà enà FranceImà inà FranceJe suisà deà FranceImà fromà France However, in French numbers 1 and 2 take theà sameà preposition. Whether you are goingà to France or you areà inà France, the same preposition is used. Thus in French there are only two prepositions to choose from for each type of geographical name. The difficulty lies in knowing which preposition to use for a city vs a state vs a country.
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