Breakdown of Ce dossier a été perdu puis retrouvé hier soir.
être
to be
ce
this
puis
then
hier soir
last night
le dossier
the folder
perdu
lost
retrouvé
found
Questions & Answers about Ce dossier a été perdu puis retrouvé hier soir.
What tense and voice is used here, and how is it formed?
It’s the passive voice in the passé composé. Structure: Subject + auxiliary avoir (present) + past participle of être (été) + past participle of the main verb. So: Ce dossier a été perdu = “was lost.” The second participle (retrouvé) is coordinated with the first and shares the same auxiliary.
Why use a été and not était?
A été (passé composé) presents completed events. Était (imparfait) would describe an ongoing state (“the file was in a lost state”) rather than a sequence of events. Because we’re narrating two completed happenings (lost, then found), the passé composé is the natural choice.
In English, is this “was lost” or “has been lost”?
Both are possible, but English typically prefers the simple past here: “was lost then found last night.” French often uses the passé composé where English uses the simple past.
Why isn’t été repeated before retrouvé?
It’s ellipsis in coordination: a été perdu puis (a été) retrouvé. You can repeat it (a été perdu puis a été retrouvé) for emphasis or clarity, but it’s heavier and usually unnecessary.
Do perdu and retrouvé agree in gender/number?
Could I say this in the active voice?
Can I use the reflexive form se perdre?
Does hier soir modify both actions or just the second?
Where can I place hier soir?
Common options:
- End: … retrouvé hier soir. (most common)
- Fronted: Hier soir, ce dossier a été perdu puis retrouvé.
- Mid-clause is possible but less elegant. Fronting adds emphasis on time.
Do I need a comma before puis?
No. Puis already signals the sequence. A comma is optional if you want a slight pause: … perdu, puis retrouvé…, but it’s not required.
Can I replace puis with et, ensuite, or après?
- puis = “then,” concise and ideal here.
- et just links actions without highlighting order; acceptable but weaker.
- ensuite is fine in a full clause: … a été perdu, ensuite il a été retrouvé.
- après usually needs a complement or a new clause: Après, il a été retrouvé. It doesn’t fit cleanly between two coordinated participles.
Is hier soir the same as “last night”? Could I say la nuit dernière?
Why not hier soirée?
What exactly does dossier mean? Is it a computer “file”?
Dossier = folder/case file/collection of documents. In computing, dossier = folder/directory. A single computer “file” is fichier. So depending on context, dossier could be a physical folder, a case file, or a digital folder.
How do I add who lost/found it?
Could I use the literary past fut?
Yes, in formal or literary writing: Ce dossier fut perdu puis retrouvé hier soir. It’s rare in everyday speech.
Is perdu et retrouvé okay instead of puis?
Et is acceptable but neutral; it doesn’t highlight the chronology as clearly. Puis explicitly marks “then,” which suits a sequence (lost, then found).
If I switch to the active with a pronoun, does the participle agree?
With avoir, the past participle agrees with a preceding direct object. Example with a feminine noun:
Any quick pronunciation tips?
- Ce dossier: suh doh-syé
- a été: a ay-tay
- perdu: pear-doo
- puis: pwee
- retrouvé: ruh-troo-vay
- hier soir: yair swar
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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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