Nous aimons manger beaucoup de pain aujourd’hui.

Word
Nous aimons manger beaucoup de pain aujourd’hui.
Meaning
We like to eat a lot of bread today.
Part of speech
sentence
Pronunciation
Lesson

Breakdown of Nous aimons manger beaucoup de pain aujourd’hui.

manger
to eat
aimer
to like
le pain
the bread
nous
we
aujourd'hui
today
beaucoup
a lot
de
some
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Questions & Answers about Nous aimons manger beaucoup de pain aujourd’hui.

Why do we use manger in its infinitive form here after aimons?
In French, when expressing that you like or love doing something, you typically follow aimer with an infinitive (e.g., aimer manger, aimer chanter, etc.). Hence, nous aimons is directly followed by the infinitive manger, which means to eat, rather than a conjugated form such as mangeons.
Why do we say beaucoup de pain instead of beaucoup du pain?
After beaucoup, you generally use de (without an article) before a noun to express a lot of something. Thus, even if you are talking about bread in a general sense, the correct phrase remains beaucoup de pain. The words du or des are partitive or plural articles, and they’re not used directly after beaucoup.
Does pain take an article here, and why is it not le pain or du pain?
When using expressions like beaucoup de, there is no additional article after de. If you wanted to say We love to eat the bread (a specific bread), you could use le. For some bread, you might see du pain. But specifically with beaucoup, you stick to beaucoup de pain.
What is the role of aujourd’hui in this sentence?
Aujourd’hui simply indicates that all of this eating is happening today. It’s an adverb of time. The spelling comes from historical French (“au jour d’hui,” meaning on the present day), which is why it might look a bit unusual.
Why nous aimons instead of on aime?
Nous and on can both mean we in modern French, but nous is more formal or standard in writing or polite speech. On is commonly used in everyday conversation. There’s no strict difference in meaning, but style and register can guide the choice. Here, nous aimons sounds a bit more formal.

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