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Questions & Answers about Je perds souvent mes clés.
Why is the verb perds used instead of perdre?
Perds is the first-person singular present form of the infinitive perdre. In French, most -re verbs drop -re and add -s for je. So je perds = “I lose.”
Why is the adverb souvent placed between the verb and the object?
In simple tenses, French frequency adverbs like souvent normally follow the conjugated verb. The pattern is: subject + verb + adverb + object. You could also say Souvent, je perds mes clés for mild emphasis.
Why do we say mes clés rather than les clés?
When you own something, you use a possessive adjective (mon/ma/mes) instead of a definite article (le/la/les). Mes clés explicitly means “my keys.”
Could we replace mes clés with a direct-object pronoun?
Yes, once you’ve mentioned mes clés, you can refer back to them with les: Je les perds souvent. Here les = “them” (the keys).
Why don’t we use a continuous tense like in English (“I am losing my keys”)?
French doesn’t have a present-continuous form as English does. The simple present covers both “I lose” and “I am losing.” If you really want to stress the action in progress, you can say Je suis en train de perdre mes clés, but that’s more cumbersome.
Why isn’t perdre reflexive here (like se perdre)?
Se perdre means “to get lost” (i.e. you lose your way). To say you lose something (your keys), you need the non-reflexive verb perdre.
How do we know clé is feminine, and how does that affect the sentence?
Clé is a feminine noun (le mot se termine en -é, but it’s feminine: la clé). In the plural, you say les clés, and with a possessive you say mes clés because mes is the plural form for both genders.
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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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