Breakdown of Peux-tu décrocher pendant que je termine ce message, puis raccrocher si c’est le mauvais numéro ?
Questions & Answers about Peux-tu décrocher pendant que je termine ce message, puis raccrocher si c’est le mauvais numéro ?
Why does the sentence start with Peux-tu instead of Tu peux?
Why is it peux and not peut?
What does décrocher mean here?
Here, décrocher means to pick up the phone / answer the phone.
Its literal meaning is something like to unhook, which comes from older telephones where you physically lifted the receiver off the hook. That is why it became the normal verb for answering a call.
So in this sentence:
- décrocher = pick up / answer
Is décrocher the same as répondre au téléphone?
They are very close, but not always identical.
In many situations, they mean almost the same thing. But décrocher focuses more on the action of picking up, while répondre focuses more on answering.
Examples:
Both are natural here, but décrocher fits especially well because the sentence later uses raccrocher, which creates a nice pair:
- décrocher = pick up
- raccrocher = hang up
Why are décrocher and raccrocher in the infinitive form?
Because they depend on peux-tu.
After pouvoir (can / to be able to), French normally uses an infinitive:
- Peux-tu décrocher... ?
- literally: Can you pick up...?
The same pattern continues later in the sentence:
- puis raccrocher
- understood as and then [can you] hang up
So the infinitives are there because they are actions linked to can you.
What does pendant que mean, and why is it followed by je termine?
Pendant que means while.
It introduces an action happening at the same time as another action:
It is followed here by the indicative: je termine. That is normal, because this is a real, factual action, not a hypothetical one.
French uses the indicative after pendant que:
Why is it je termine and not je finirai or je finis?
Je termine is present tense and works naturally after pendant que to describe something currently in progress or happening right now.
- pendant que je termine ce message = while I finish/am finishing this message
You could think of it as very close to English while I finish or while I’m finishing.
Why not the others?
- je finirai = I will finish → future, not right for while
- je finis is also possible in some contexts, but terminer ce message sounds especially natural when talking about completing a message you are currently writing
In practice, terminer emphasizes bringing it to completion.
What does puis mean here? Is it the same as et puis?
Here puis means then.
So:
- ..., puis raccrocher...
- ..., then hang up...
Yes, it is related to et puis, which can also mean and then. In this sentence, puis is slightly more concise and fits well in a written instruction.
Compare:
- Décroche, puis raccroche. = Pick up, then hang up.
- Décroche, et puis raccroche. = also possible, a bit heavier here
What does raccrocher mean exactly?
Why is it si c’est le mauvais numéro and not something with wrong number more directly?
French usually says c’est le mauvais numéro for it’s the wrong number.
Word-for-word:
- mauvais = bad / wrong
- numéro = number
So:
- le mauvais numéro = the wrong number
This is the normal French way to say it in this kind of situation.
You could also hear:
- Vous avez fait le mauvais numéro. = You dialed the wrong number.
- Ce n’est pas le bon numéro. = This isn’t the right number.
Why is it c’est and not il est?
French usually uses c’est before a noun phrase like le mauvais numéro.
- c’est le mauvais numéro = it’s the wrong number
That is the standard structure.
Il est is generally used more with adjectives without an article:
- Il est occupé. = He is busy.
- but
- C’est un numéro occupé. / C’est le mauvais numéro.
So c’est is the correct choice here.
Is numéro always masculine? Why le mauvais numéro and not la mauvaise numéro?
Is this sentence polite, informal, or formal?
It is informal, because it uses tu.
- Peux-tu... ? = informal singular
- Pouvez-vous... ? = formal singular or plural
So this sentence sounds like you are speaking to:
- a friend
- a family member
- a coworker you know well
- a child
A formal version would be:
- Pouvez-vous décrocher pendant que je termine ce message, puis raccrocher si c’est le mauvais numéro ?
Could I replace Peux-tu with Est-ce que tu peux?
Yes, absolutely.
These are both correct:
- Peux-tu décrocher... ?
- Est-ce que tu peux décrocher... ?
The second is often easier for learners because it does not use inversion.
They mean the same thing, but the tone differs slightly:
- Peux-tu... ? = a bit more compact, standard
- Est-ce que tu peux... ? = very common in speech, often feels a little more relaxed
Why is there no repeated peux-tu before raccrocher?
Because French can omit repeated words when the meaning is clear.
The full version would be something like:
- Peux-tu décrocher pendant que je termine ce message, puis peux-tu raccrocher si c’est le mauvais numéro ?
But that sounds repetitive. So French normally says:
- Peux-tu décrocher..., puis raccrocher... ?
The second infinitive raccrocher is still understood as depending on Peux-tu.
How would this sound more natural in everyday spoken French?
A very natural spoken version might be:
- Tu peux décrocher pendant que je finis ce message, puis raccrocher si c’est le mauvais numéro ?
Or even:
- Tu peux répondre pendant que je finis ce message, et raccrocher si c’est le mauvais numéro ?
The original sentence is already good French, but everyday speech often prefers:
- Tu peux... ? instead of Peux-tu... ?
- sometimes finis instead of termine
- sometimes répondre instead of décrocher
The original version sounds clear, correct, and natural, especially in neutral written French.
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