Prepositions of Place
Prépositions de Lieu
Prepositions of Place in French
Overview
Prepositions of place tell you where something or someone is located. In French, the prépositions de lieu are among the first words you need to describe your surroundings, give directions, or talk about where you live and work.
At the A1 level, you will encounter the most common spatial prepositions: à (at/to), de (from), dans (in/inside), sur (on), sous (under), devant (in front of), derrière (behind), entre (between), and the uniquely French chez (at someone's place). These small words appear in almost every conversation.
While many of these prepositions have direct English equivalents, some do not translate one-to-one. The preposition à can mean "at," "to," or "in" depending on context, and chez has no single English equivalent — it expresses being at someone's home or place of business.
How It Works
| Preposition | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| à | at, to, in | à Paris, à l'école |
| de | from, of | de Lyon, de la gare |
| dans | in, inside | dans la maison |
| sur | on, on top of | sur la table |
| sous | under, beneath | sous le lit |
| devant | in front of | devant l'école |
| derrière | behind | derrière la porte |
| entre | between | entre la banque et la poste |
| chez | at someone's place | chez Marie, chez moi |
| près de | near | près de la gare |
| loin de | far from | loin du centre |
| à côté de | next to | à côté de la pharmacie |
| en face de | across from | en face du parc |
Key points:
- À contracts with le to form au and with les to form aux: au cinéma, aux toilettes.
- De contracts with le to form du and with les to form des: près du parc, loin des magasins.
- Chez is followed by a person's name or a stressed pronoun: chez Pierre, chez nous.
- Dans implies being physically inside something, while à is more general for location.
Examples in Context
| French | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Je suis à Paris. | I am in Paris. | à + city |
| Le chat est sur la table. | The cat is on the table. | Physical position |
| Il est chez Marie. | He is at Marie's place. | Uniquely French preposition |
| Le livre est dans le sac. | The book is in the bag. | Inside a container |
| Les clés sont sous le tapis. | The keys are under the mat. | Beneath something |
| La boulangerie est devant la banque. | The bakery is in front of the bank. | Relative position |
| Le jardin est derrière la maison. | The garden is behind the house. | Opposite of devant |
| La pharmacie est entre la poste et le café. | The pharmacy is between the post office and the cafe. | Between two places |
| J'habite près de la gare. | I live near the station. | Proximity |
| Le supermarché est à côté de l'école. | The supermarket is next to the school. | Adjacent |
| Tu vas chez le médecin? | Are you going to the doctor's? | chez + profession |
| Il y a un chat sous le lit. | There is a cat under the bed. | Common household sentence |
Common Mistakes
Confusing "dans" and "à"
- Wrong: Je suis dans Paris.
- Right: Je suis à Paris.
- Why: For cities, use à. Use dans for physical containment: dans la voiture (in the car), dans la boîte (in the box).
Forgetting contractions with à and de
- Wrong: Je vais à le cinéma.
- Right: Je vais au cinéma.
- Why: The prepositions à and de must contract with le and les. See Contractions for full details.
Using "à" instead of "chez" for people
- Wrong: Je vais à Marie.
- Right: Je vais chez Marie.
- Why: When going to a person's place, always use chez, not à.
Mixing up "devant" and "avant"
- Wrong: La voiture est avant la maison.
- Right: La voiture est devant la maison.
- Why: Devant is for physical space (in front of). Avant is for time (before).
Practice Tips
- Describe your room or desk using as many prepositions as possible: Le téléphone est sur le bureau, les chaussures sont sous le lit, le sac est derrière la chaise...
- When giving or following directions in French, focus on à côté de, en face de, devant, and derrière — these are the most practical for real-life navigation.
- Use chez in daily sentences: Je rentre chez moi (I'm going home), On mange chez toi? (Shall we eat at your place?).
Related Concepts
- Prepositions with Countries — how prepositions change with geographical names
- The Pronoun Y — replaces à + place in sentences
Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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