Breakdown of Mets ton clignotant avant le virage, surtout quand il faut freiner près de l’école.
Questions & Answers about Mets ton clignotant avant le virage, surtout quand il faut freiner près de l’école.
Why is it Mets and not Tu mets?
Mets is the tu imperative form of mettre.
In French, when you give a command to someone directly, you usually drop the subject pronoun:
- Tu mets ton clignotant. = You put on your indicator.
- Mets ton clignotant. = Put on your indicator.
So mets here is a command addressed to one person informally.
Why does mets keep the -s in the imperative?
Because mettre is not an -er verb.
In the tu imperative, many -er verbs lose the final -s:
- Regarde !
- Tourne !
But verbs like mettre, prendre, sortir, etc. usually keep it:
- Mets !
- Prends !
- Sors !
So Mets is the correct imperative form.
What exactly does mettre son clignotant mean? Is that a normal French expression?
Yes, it is completely normal.
French often says mettre son clignotant, literally to put on one’s indicator/blinker, where English might say:
- put your indicator on
- use your turn signal
- signal
So Mets ton clignotant is a very natural driving instruction.
You may also hear:
- mettre le clignotant
- mettre son clignotant à gauche / à droite
Why is it ton clignotant?
Because clignotant is a masculine singular noun, so the possessive adjective must match the noun:
- mon / ton / son
- masculine singular noun
- ma / ta / sa
- feminine singular noun
- mes / tes / ses
- plural noun
So:
- ton clignotant
- but ta voiture
The possessive agrees with the thing owned, not with the gender of the person being spoken to.
What does virage mean here? Is it the same as turn?
Why is it avant le virage and not avant du virage or avant à le virage?
What does surtout do in this sentence?
Surtout means especially or above all.
It adds emphasis:
- Mets ton clignotant avant le virage = Put on your indicator before the turn.
- surtout quand il faut freiner près de l’école = especially when you have to brake near the school.
So the speaker is saying this is important in general, but even more important in that situation.
Why does French say quand il faut freiner? What does il faut mean exactly?
Il faut is a very common impersonal expression meaning:
- it is necessary
- you have to
- one must
So quand il faut freiner means when you have to brake.
Important point: the il here does not refer to a person. It is just part of the fixed expression il faut.
Examples:
- Il faut partir. = We/you/one must leave.
- Il faut freiner. = You have to brake.
Why is it freiner after il faut?
Because falloir (used almost always as il faut) is followed by an infinitive when the action is general.
So:
- il faut freiner = it is necessary to brake / you have to brake
This is similar to English have to + verb.
Other examples:
- Il faut attendre.
- Il faut tourner à gauche.
- Il faut ralentir.
Why is it près de l’école?
Why is there an apostrophe in l’école?
How would a French speaker naturally pronounce Mets ton clignotant avant le virage?
A learner-friendly pronunciation would be roughly:
May ton klee-nyo-tahn ah-vahn luh vee-rahzh
A few useful points:
- Mets sounds like may
- ton has a nasal vowel; the n is not strongly pronounced
- clignotant has the gn sound like ny in canyon
- virage ends with the soft zh sound, like the s in measure
Also, in natural speech, some sounds may link smoothly together, but for a learner, saying each word clearly is perfectly fine.
Is this sentence using tu because it is informal?
Yes. The imperative form Mets corresponds to tu, so it is informal singular.
If you were speaking politely to one person, or to more than one person, you would use vous:
So:
Could clignotant also mean something other than a turn signal?
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