Breakdown of Avant d’entrer, j’essuie mes chaussures sur le paillasson parce qu’il pleut.
Questions & Answers about Avant d’entrer, j’essuie mes chaussures sur le paillasson parce qu’il pleut.
Why is it avant d’entrer and not avant entrer?
After avant, French normally uses de + infinitive when the subject stays the same.
So:
- Avant d’entrer = before entering / before I enter
The de becomes d’ because entrer begins with a vowel.
A useful contrast:
- Avant d’entrer, j’essuie mes chaussures. = I am the one entering and wiping.
- Avant qu’il entre... = before he enters...
When the subject changes, French usually uses avant que + subjunctive instead.
Why is there an apostrophe in j’essuie?
Because je becomes j’ before a vowel sound or a mute h.
So:
- je parle
- j’entre
- j’essuie
This is called elision. French does it to make pronunciation smoother.
Why is it j’essuie and not j’essuye?
The verb is essuyer. In some forms, the y changes to i before a silent ending.
So you get:
- j’essuie
- tu essuies
- il/elle essuie
- nous essuyons
- vous essuyez
- ils/elles essuient
This kind of spelling change is common in French verbs ending in -yer.
What does essuyer mean here exactly?
Here, essuyer means to wipe.
So j’essuie mes chaussures means that the speaker is wiping their shoes, probably to remove water or mud.
Depending on context, essuyer can also mean to dry or to mop up, but in this sentence wipe is the most natural idea.
Why does French say mes chaussures instead of just les chaussures?
French uses possessive adjectives like mon, ma, mes much like English uses my.
So mes chaussures simply means my shoes.
You may have learned that French often uses the instead of my with body parts, especially with reflexive verbs, for example:
- Je me lave les mains. = I wash my hands.
But that pattern does not apply automatically to everything. In this sentence, mes chaussures is completely natural.
Why is chaussures plural?
Because the speaker is talking about both shoes.
- une chaussure = one shoe
- des chaussures / mes chaussures = shoes
French, like English, normally uses the plural when talking about a pair of shoes.
Why is it sur le paillasson?
With essuyer, French commonly uses sur to show the surface you wipe something on.
So:
- essuyer ses chaussures sur le paillasson = to wipe your shoes on the doormat
Using sur here is idiomatic. It tells you where the wiping happens.
What is a paillasson?
A paillasson is a doormat or welcome mat, the mat by the door where you wipe your shoes before going inside.
It is a very common household word in French.
Why is it parce qu’il with qu’?
Because que becomes qu’ before a vowel sound.
So:
- parce que + il becomes
- parce qu’il
This is another case of elision, just like je → j’.
Why does French say il pleut with il? Who is il?
In weather expressions like il pleut, the il does not refer to a person or thing. It is an impersonal subject.
French needs a subject in a normal sentence, so it uses il in expressions like:
- il pleut = it is raining
- il neige = it is snowing
- il fait froid = it is cold
So this il works a lot like English it in it’s raining.
Why is the sentence in the present tense?
The present tense in French can describe:
- what someone is doing right now
- what someone usually does
- a general habit or routine
So j’essuie mes chaussures can mean something happening now, or something the speaker normally does in this situation.
Likewise, il pleut gives the current reason: it is raining.
Why is there a comma after Avant d’entrer?
Because Avant d’entrer is an introductory phrase placed at the beginning of the sentence.
The comma helps separate that opening idea from the main clause:
- Avant d’entrer, j’essuie mes chaussures...
In French, this comma is very natural and helps readability, just as in English with Before entering, ...
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