Breakdown of Si tu ne prends pas le premier bus, tu risques d’être en retard au travail.
Questions & Answers about Si tu ne prends pas le premier bus, tu risques d’être en retard au travail.
Why is it tu ne prends pas and not tu ne prend pas?
Because the verb prendre has to agree with tu.
In the present tense:
- je prends
- tu prends
- il/elle/on prend
- nous prenons
- vous prenez
- ils/elles prennent
So with tu, the correct form is prends.
Why are there two parts to the negative: ne ... pas?
In standard French, negation is usually made with ne before the verb and pas after it.
So:
- tu prends = you take
- tu ne prends pas = you do not take
In everyday spoken French, people often drop ne, especially informally:
- Si tu prends pas le premier bus...
But in careful written French, ne ... pas is the normal form.
Why does the sentence start with si?
Si means if when it introduces a condition.
So:
This is a very common structure in French for conditional statements.
Be careful: this si means if, not yes. French si can also mean yes in response to a negative question, but that is a different use.
Why is it si tu ne prends pas... tu risques... with present tense in both parts?
French often uses the present tense in both parts of a real or likely condition.
Pattern:
- Si + present, present / future / imperative
Here:
- Si tu ne prends pas le premier bus = If you don’t take the first bus
- tu risques d’être en retard = you risk being late / you’re likely to be late
English sometimes uses present + future, but French does not use the future tense directly after si in this kind of sentence.
So Si tu ne prendras pas... would be wrong here.
Why is it le premier bus and not just premier bus?
What does premier mean here, and why does it come before bus?
Why is it tu risques d’être?
What exactly does risquer de mean here?
Why is it être en retard and not just être tard?
Why is it au travail?
Could I say pour le travail instead of au travail?
Why is the sentence using tu and not vous?
How is prends pronounced if the final letters are written but not all heard?
Prends is pronounced roughly like pran in English approximation, with a nasal vowel.
Important points:
- the final -ds is normally not pronounced
- the vowel is nasal, so it does not sound like ordinary English prend
Similarly:
- prend and prends sound the same in normal speech
This is common in French: different verb forms may be spelled differently but pronounced the same.
Is there anything special about the pronunciation of d’être?
Yes. D’être is pronounced smoothly because of elision.
Instead of saying de être, French shortens it to d’être.
That makes the phrase flow more naturally:
Also, être has a circumflex accent, but that does not usually change the pronunciation in a way beginners need to worry much about here. The key thing is recognizing that d’ is just de before a vowel.
Can I translate this sentence word for word into English?
You can understand it word by word, but a natural English translation may vary.
Word-by-word:
- Si = if
- tu = you
- ne prends pas = do not take
- le premier bus = the first bus
- tu risques = you risk / you are likely
- d’être = of being / to be
- en retard = late
- au travail = at work / for work
Natural English versions could be:
- If you don’t take the first bus, you risk being late for work.
- If you don’t catch the first bus, you might be late for work.
- If you miss the first bus, you could end up late for work.
So the French structure is clear, but the best English wording depends on style.
Could prendre le bus also mean to catch the bus?
Yes. Prendre le bus often means to take the bus, but depending on context it can also be translated as to catch the bus.
In this sentence, English might naturally use either:
- take the first bus
- catch the first bus
If the idea is about not missing a scheduled bus, catch may sound especially natural in English, even though French still uses prendre.
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