Questions & Answers about Nous nous souvenons de ce pont, tandis que Marie ne s’en souvient jamais.
Why are there two instances of nous in Nous nous souvenons?
French pronominal verbs use a subject pronoun and a reflexive/clitic pronoun. The first nous is the subject (we), and the second nous marks the verb as pronominal. It doesn’t literally mean “ourselves” here; it’s just required by the verb se souvenir.
Why is it se souvenir de and not just se souvenir something?
What does en stand for in Marie ne s’en souvient jamais?
Do I have to use en, or can I just repeat de ce pont?
How does word order work with negation and these pronouns?
Why is it s’en and not se en?
How is se souvenir conjugated in the present? It looks irregular.
Can I use se rappeler instead of se souvenir?
What’s the nuance of tandis que? Could I use alors que or pendant que?
- Tandis que and alors que both often mean “whereas,” marking contrast; they’re largely interchangeable here.
- Pendant que means “while” in a purely temporal sense (simultaneity), not contrast. In this sentence, contrast is intended, so tandis que/alors que fit better.
Why jamais instead of pas? How does jamais work?
Can the ne be dropped in speech?
Can en refer to people, or only things?
Any pronunciation tips for this sentence?
- Nous nous flows as [nu nu]; keep both but don’t over-emphasize.
- Souvenons and souvient have a nasal vowel at the end: [suvənɔ̃], [suvjɛ̃].
- S’en links smoothly before a vowel: [sɑ̃].
- Tandis que usually has a silent final -s in standard speech: [tɑ̃di kə]. Some regions may pronounce the -s.
How would this look in the past, and is there agreement on the participle?
- Passé composé: Nous nous sommes souvenus de ce pont, tandis que Marie ne s’en est jamais souvenu.
- With se souvenir de, the past participle souvenu is invariable (no agreement), because there’s no preceding direct object; de introduces an indirect complement, and en never triggers agreement.
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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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