Breakdown of Tu peux me prêter ton chargeur? Ma batterie est presque vide.
être
to be
tu
you
ton
your
ma
my
pouvoir
to be able to
me
me
prêter
to lend
presque
almost
vide
empty
la batterie
the battery
le chargeur
the charger
Questions & Answers about Tu peux me prêter ton chargeur? Ma batterie est presque vide.
Is Tu peux me prêter ton chargeur ? polite enough?
What’s the difference between prêter and emprunter?
- prêter = to lend (the subject is the owner): Tu peux me prêter ton chargeur ?
- emprunter = to borrow (the subject is the borrower): Je peux t’emprunter ton chargeur ? Both are fine; they just flip who is the grammatical subject. Avoid saying something like Tu peux m’emprunter ton chargeur ? if you mean “Can I borrow…?”—that would mean “Can you borrow…?”
How do I say “Can you lend it to me?” with pronouns?
- Neutral: Tu peux me le prêter ? (here le stands for ton chargeur)
- Inversion: Peux-tu me le prêter ? (more formal)
- Negative: Tu ne peux pas me le prêter ?
- Imperative (command, friendly): Prête-le-moi, s’il te plaît.
- Negative imperative: Ne me le prête pas. Pronoun order rule (before the verb in normal sentences): me/te/se/nous/vous + le/la/les + lui/leur + y + en.
Why ton and not ta in ton chargeur?
How do I say this to someone I don’t know well (formal/respectful)?
Use vous:
- Vous pouvez me prêter votre chargeur ?
- More polite: Est-ce que vous pourriez me prêter votre chargeur, s’il vous plaît ?
- Even more formal: Auriez-vous un chargeur à me prêter, s’il vous plaît ?
Can I use puis-je?
Is batterie the right word, or should it be pile?
Other natural ways to say my battery is low/almost empty?
Why is presque placed before vide? Are there alternatives?
Any pronunciation tips for this sentence?
- Tu peux: the final x in peux is silent.
- prêter: the ê sounds like “ay”; roughly “pray-tay.”
- chargeur: “shar-ZHUR” (the “j” sound like in “measure”).
- batterie: “bat-REE.”
- presque: “PRESSK” (final “e” silent, “-sque” = “sk”).
- vide: “VEED.” The e in me is often very short in speech: you may hear something like Tu peux m’prêter… (reduction in pronunciation, not in writing).
Any spelling or accent gotchas here?
Why me prêter and not prêter à moi?
How do I ask for “a charger” rather than “your charger”?
Does chargeur mean the cable, the plug, or both?
Could I use a command like “Lend me your charger”?
Is Ma batterie est presque morte acceptable?
Be careful: Ma batterie est morte usually means the battery no longer holds a charge and needs replacement. To say it’s low, prefer Ma batterie est presque vide, presque à plat, or Je n’ai presque plus de batterie. For the phone itself, people do colloquially say Mon téléphone est presque mort to mean it’s about to die (run out of battery).
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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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