Breakdown of Je fais asseoir mes amis; ensuite, on s’assoit tous.
je
I
l'ami
the friend
ensuite
then
se
oneself
mes
my
on
we
tout
all
faire asseoir
to have someone sit
s'asseoir
to sit down
Questions & Answers about Je fais asseoir mes amis; ensuite, on s’assoit tous.
What exactly does faire asseoir mean here? Is it forceful, like “to make someone sit”?
The construction faire + infinitive is the French causative. Je fais asseoir mes amis means “I have my friends sit down / I seat my friends.” It usually conveys arranging, inviting, or ushering, not necessarily forcing. In context it’s closer to “I seat them” or “I invite them to sit” than “I force them to sit.”
Why is it Je fais asseoir mes amis and not Je fais s’asseoir mes amis?
Could I simply say J’assois mes amis?
Grammatically yes: asseoir quelqu’un = “to seat someone.” However, for physically seating people, everyday French prefers faire asseoir or verbs like installer. J’assois mes amis can sound a bit formal/odd in casual speech. It’s very common in figurative uses: asseoir son autorité (“to establish one’s authority”).
If I replace “mes amis” with a pronoun, what are the correct forms?
- Present: Je les fais asseoir. / Je les fais s’asseoir.
- Negative: Je ne les fais pas asseoir.
- Past: Je les ai fait asseoir. (Note: with causative faire, the past participle fait is invariable: no -e/-s.)
How do you conjugate s’asseoir? Are both s’assoit and s’assied correct?
Yes. Two accepted patterns coexist:
- Pattern 1 (with -oi-): je m’assois, tu t’assois, il/elle/on s’assoit, nous nous assoyons, vous vous assoyez, ils/elles s’assoient.
- Pattern 2 (with -ie-/ -ey-): je m’assieds, tu t’assieds, il/elle/on s’assied, nous nous asseyons, vous vous asseyez, ils/elles s’asseyent.
Usage tips:
Is the spelling assoir (without the first “e”) acceptable?
Why use on instead of nous in the second clause?
Is On s’assoit tous correct? Should it be Tout le monde s’assoit? What about toutes?
How do you pronounce tous here—do you say the final -s?
Where does tous go in the sentence? Could I say On tous s’assoit?
Is the punctuation with the semicolon and the comma after ensuite correct?
Yes. A semicolon (;) can link two closely related clauses in French. Typographically, French normally uses a (thin) space before ;, which is what you see in plain text. The comma after Ensuite is also standard. Alternatives like a period or Puis instead of Ensuite are fine: Je fais asseoir mes amis. Ensuite/Puis, on s’assoit tous.
Any pronunciation tips or liaisons in this sentence?
How would I say it in the past? Anything tricky with agreement?
Which prepositions go with s’asseoir?
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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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