Tu dois me prévenir avant de partir.

Breakdown of Tu dois me prévenir avant de partir.

tu
you
avant de
before
partir
to leave
devoir
must
me
me
prévenir
to let know

Questions & Answers about Tu dois me prévenir avant de partir.

What does prévenir mean here? Does it mean to prevent?
  • Here prévenir means to warn, inform, or let someone know in advance.
  • With a person as the object (e.g., me prévenir), it does not mean to prevent. To express prevent (someone from doing something), use empêcher: m'empêcher de partir.
  • Note: prévenir can mean prevent only with impersonal/non-human objects: prévenir un accident (to prevent an accident).
Why is it me prévenir and not prévenir moi?
Why is prévenir in the infinitive after dois?
  • devoir here is a modal/semi-auxiliary (must/have to) and is followed by an infinitive.
  • Only devoir is conjugated; the action verb stays in the infinitive: Je dois te prévenir, Ils devront nous prévenir.
Where do pronouns go in negatives and questions with this structure?
Why avant de? Can I say avant partir or avant à?
  • The correct pattern is avant de + infinitive: avant de partir. You cannot drop de, and avant à is incorrect.
  • Before a noun, use avant + noun: avant ton départ.
  • Elide before vowels: avant d'arriver.
When do I use avant que instead of avant de?
In avant de partir, who is leaving?
Why use partir and not quitter?
  • partir is intransitive and stands alone: partir (to leave).
  • quitter is transitive and needs a direct object: quitter la maison, quitter son travail.
  • So: avant de partir but avant de quitter la maison.
Can I use s'en aller instead of partir?
Is me a direct or indirect object with prévenir?
How do I add what I’m being warned about?
Is Tu dois... too strong? How can I soften it?
  • Softer or more polite options:
    • Tu devrais me prévenir... (you should)
    • Il faudrait me prévenir... or Il faut me prévenir...
    • Merci de me prévenir..., Pense à me prévenir...
    • Formal/plural: Vous devez / Vous devriez me prévenir...
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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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