Regular Adjectives
Adjectifs Réguliers
Regular Adjectives in French
Overview
French adjectives must agree in gender (masculine/feminine) and number (singular/plural) with the noun they describe. This is one of the fundamental grammar rules you learn at the A1 level, and it affects nearly every descriptive sentence you build. Unlike English, where adjectives never change form, French adjectives shift their endings constantly.
The regular pattern is straightforward: add -e for feminine, -s for masculine plural, and -es for feminine plural. If the masculine form already ends in -e, nothing changes for the feminine. These written changes are not always audible — many adjective agreements are silent in spoken French, but they are essential in writing.
Another key difference from English: most French adjectives come after the noun, not before it. You say un livre intéressant (an interesting book), not un intéressant livre. There are exceptions (the BANGS adjectives), but the default position is after the noun.
How It Works
Agreement Rules
| Form | Rule | Example (intelligent) |
|---|---|---|
| Masculine singular | base form | intelligent |
| Feminine singular | + e | intelligente |
| Masculine plural | + s | intelligents |
| Feminine plural | + es | intelligentes |
Special Cases
| Masculine ending | Feminine change | Example |
|---|---|---|
| -e (no change) | same | calme → calme |
| -eux | -euse | heureux → heureuse |
| -if | -ive | actif → active |
| -er | -ère | premier → première |
| -en | -enne | italien → italienne |
| -on | -onne | bon → bonne |
Position: After the Noun (Default)
| French | English |
|---|---|
| un garçon intelligent | an intelligent boy |
| une fille intelligente | an intelligent girl |
| des étudiants français | French students |
| une ville importante | an important city |
Examples in Context
| French | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| un garçon intelligent | an intelligent boy | Masculine singular |
| une fille intelligente | an intelligent girl | Feminine: + e |
| des étudiants français | French students | Masculine plural: + s |
| des étudiantes françaises | French students (f.) | Feminine plural: + es |
| un homme calme | a calm man | Already ends in -e: no change |
| une femme calme | a calm woman | Same form for both genders |
| Il est content. | He is happy. | Masculine |
| Elle est contente. | She is happy. | Feminine: + e (pronounced differently) |
| Ils sont fatigués. | They are tired. | Masculine plural |
| Elles sont fatiguées. | They are tired. (f.) | Feminine plural |
Common Mistakes
Forgetting feminine agreement
- Wrong: Elle est intelligent.
- Right: Elle est intelligente.
- Why: Adjectives must agree with the gender of the noun or subject. Feminine subjects require the feminine form of the adjective.
Placing adjectives before the noun by default
- Wrong: un intéressant livre
- Right: un livre intéressant
- Why: Most French adjectives follow the noun. Only a specific group (BANGS: beauty, age, number, goodness, size) regularly precedes the noun.
Pronouncing silent agreements
- Wrong: Pronouncing the final -s in intelligents
- Right: The -s is silent; intelligent and intelligents sound the same
- Why: Plural -s is almost always silent in French. The agreement matters for writing but usually not for pronunciation (with some exceptions where the feminine -e makes a previously silent consonant audible).
Practice Tips
- Pick an adjective and practice all four forms: grand, grande, grands, grandes. Then use each in a sentence with a matching noun. This builds the agreement reflex.
- Describe people around you or characters in a show: Il est grand et intelligent. Elle est petite et amusante. Pay attention to matching gender every time.
- Remember that the feminine -e often makes a previously silent final consonant audible: petit [puh-tee] vs. petite [puh-teet]. This pronunciation change is your ear's clue to gender.
Related Concepts
- Gender of Nouns — adjective agreement depends on noun gender
- BANGS Adjectives — adjectives that go before the noun
- Demonstrative Adjectives — ce, cette, ces
- Comparisons — comparing with adjectives
Prerequisite
Gender of NounsA1Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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