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“How does grammatical gender work in French?”
Every French noun is either masculine or feminine, and this affects the articles and adjectives used with it. "Le" is used with masculine nouns and "la" with feminine ones. Adjectives also change form to match — for example, "petit" (masc.) becomes "petite" (fem.).
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Questions & Answers about Où est le téléphone?
How should I pronounce “Où est le téléphone ?” in French?
You can think of Où as sounding like “oo” in English. The word est sounds like “eh,” and le téléphone is pronounced “luh tay-lay-fohn.” Make sure to link the sounds slightly between est and le so it flows naturally.
Why is the sentence structured with “Où est” instead of using a different word order?
In French, it’s very common to place the question word (Où, meaning “where”) first, then have an inverted form of “être” (est, meaning “is”) followed by the subject. This direct question structure is standard for asking about location.
Could I say “Où est-ce que le téléphone est ?” instead?
A more typical longer form would be: Où est-ce que le téléphone se trouve ? or simply Où est-ce qu’il est ? However, Où est le téléphone ? is already perfectly correct and more straightforward.
Does “Où est” change if the subject is plural or feminine?
No. The verb form est comes from être, which only changes with the subject pronoun (il/elle/on est). For a plural subject, you’d use sont (for example: Où sont les téléphones ?). The noun’s gender (masculine vs. feminine) doesn’t affect the form of est.