A1

Expressions of Quantity in French

Expressions de Quantité

Overview

Expressions of quantity are the words and phrases that tell you how much or how many of something there is. In French, expressions de quantité like beaucoup de (a lot of), peu de (a little of), and trop de (too much of) follow an important rule that catches many beginners off guard: they are always followed by de (or d' before a vowel), with no article.

At the A1 level, these expressions are vital for everyday tasks — describing how much food you want, commenting on weather, or expressing opinions about quantities. You will also learn quantity words like très (very), trop (too), and assez (enough) that modify adjectives and adverbs directly without using de.

The distinction between quantity expressions used with nouns (which need de) and those used with adjectives (which do not) is one of the most practical grammar points you will learn early on.

How It Works

Quantity expressions + de + noun (no article):

French English Example
beaucoup de a lot of, many beaucoup d'amis
peu de few, little peu de temps
un peu de a little bit of un peu de lait
trop de too much/many trop de travail
assez de enough assez d'argent
plus de more plus de pain
moins de less/fewer moins de sucre
pas de no, not any pas de problème
combien de how much/many combien de personnes

Intensity words + adjective/adverb (no de):

French English Example
très very très beau
trop too (much) trop cher
assez quite, enough assez grand
peu not very peu intéressant
plus more plus rapide
moins less moins difficile

Key rules:

  • After a quantity expression, use de/d' with no article: beaucoup de livres (not beaucoup des livres).
  • De becomes d' before a vowel or silent h: beaucoup d'eau, trop d'histoires.
  • Très and trop are NOT interchangeable. Très means "very" (neutral), trop means "too" (excessive).
  • Assez changes meaning by position: before an adjective it means "quite/rather" (assez joli), but assez de + noun means "enough" (assez de temps).

Examples in Context

French English Note
J'ai beaucoup d'amis. I have many friends. de + vowel = d'
C'est très beau. It's very beautiful. Modifying adjective
Tu manges trop! You eat too much! Modifying verb
Il y a peu d'eau. There's little water. Small quantity
J'ai assez de temps. I have enough time. Sufficient quantity
Donne-moi un peu de lait. Give me a little milk. Small amount
Il y a trop de bruit ici. There's too much noise here. Excess
C'est assez difficile. It's quite difficult. Modifying adjective
Il n'y a plus de pain. There's no more bread. ne...plus de
Je veux moins de sucre. I want less sugar. Comparison
Elle a peu d'expérience. She has little experience. de + vowel = d'
C'est trop cher pour moi. It's too expensive for me. Modifying adjective

Common Mistakes

Adding an article after the quantity expression

  • Wrong: Beaucoup des amis, trop du travail
  • Right: Beaucoup d'amis, trop de travail
  • Why: Quantity expressions are always followed by de alone — never by du, de la, de l', or des.

Confusing "très" and "trop"

  • Wrong: C'est trop bon! (when you mean it's very good, not excessively good)
  • Right: C'est très bon!
  • Why: Très = very (positive or neutral), trop = too much (implies excess or a problem). In casual slang, trop is sometimes used for emphasis like "so good," but in standard French, keep the distinction.

Using "beaucoup" directly with an adjective

  • Wrong: Elle est beaucoup belle.
  • Right: Elle est très belle.
  • Why: Beaucoup modifies verbs and goes with de + noun. To modify an adjective, use très, trop, or assez.

Practice Tips

  1. Describe the contents of your fridge or pantry using quantity expressions: Il y a beaucoup de lait, un peu de fromage, pas de beurre, trop de chocolat...
  2. Practice the difference between très and trop by describing things around you: La soupe est très chaude (nice and hot) vs. La soupe est trop chaude (too hot to eat).
  3. When reading French, watch for de/d' after quantity words — this pattern repeats so often that recognizing it will boost your reading speed significantly.

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