Breakdown of Cette soupe à la citrouille est simple, mais elle me plaît davantage en octobre qu’en avril.
Questions & Answers about Cette soupe à la citrouille est simple, mais elle me plaît davantage en octobre qu’en avril.
Why is it cette soupe and not ce soupe?
Why does French say soupe à la citrouille? Why use à here?
In food vocabulary, French often uses à to show what something is made with or flavored with.
So soupe à la citrouille means literally something like soup with pumpkin / pumpkin soup.
Other common examples:
- tarte aux pommes = apple tart
- glace à la vanille = vanilla ice cream
- gâteau au chocolat = chocolate cake
English often uses one noun directly before another, but French usually needs a linking word like à or de.
Is citrouille the normal word for pumpkin?
Yes, citrouille is a standard French word for pumpkin.
However, learners often also run into potiron. In everyday usage, the two can overlap, though in some contexts they can refer to slightly different squash varieties. For many learners, the main thing to know is:
- citrouille = pumpkin
- soupe à la citrouille = pumpkin soup
If you are just trying to understand this sentence, citrouille is perfectly straightforward.
Why is it elle me plaît instead of je l’aime?
Because plaire does not work like aimer.
- aimer = to like / to love
- J’aime cette soupe. = I like this soup.
- plaire = to please
- Cette soupe me plaît. = This soup pleases me.
So in French, the thing that is liked becomes the subject of plaire.
Structure:
- quelque chose plaît à quelqu’un
- literally: something pleases to someone
So:
Why is it me plaît and not plaît à moi?
Because with plaire, French normally uses an indirect object pronoun before the verb:
So the normal pattern is:
You can say à moi for emphasis, but not as the basic neutral form:
- Cette soupe me plaît. = normal
- Cette soupe plaît à moi. = not idiomatic in standard French
- Cette soupe me plaît, à moi. = possible only for emphasis
Why is the pronoun elle used in the second part?
Why is it simple and not something like simplee for feminine?
Because some French adjectives have the same form in the masculine and feminine singular.
simple is one of them:
- un plat simple
- une soupe simple
So even though soupe is feminine, the adjective stays simple in spelling.
Its plural forms are:
- simples for masculine plural
- simples for feminine plural
What does davantage mean here? How is it different from plus?
Here davantage means more.
In this sentence, davantage ... qu’... means more ... than ...:
Compared with plus:
- plus is more common in everyday speech
- davantage is often a bit more formal or polished
So both are possible in many contexts:
- Elle me plaît plus en octobre qu’en avril.
- Elle me plaît davantage en octobre qu’en avril.
The version with davantage sounds a little more careful or literary.
How does the comparison work in davantage en octobre qu’en avril?
This is the standard comparative pattern:
- davantage ... que ... = more ... than ...
- plus ... que ... = more ... than ...
So here the sentence compares October and April:
You can think of it as:
- It pleases me more in October than in April.
The word que introduces the second part of the comparison, just like than in English.
Why is it en octobre and en avril?
Why does que en avril become qu’en avril?
Why is there an accent in plaît?
Could I replace davantage with plus in this sentence?
Yes, in most everyday situations you could say:
That would sound natural.
However, there is one small thing to remember: in spoken French, plus can sometimes be less clear because its pronunciation changes depending on context. Davantage avoids that ambiguity and can sound a bit more elegant.
So:
- plus = very common, everyday
- davantage = also correct, a bit more formal or refined
Is this sentence using plaire to talk about personal taste rather than strong liking?
Yes. Plaire often sounds a bit more nuanced than aimer.
- J’aime cette soupe. = I like this soup.
- Cette soupe me plaît. = This soup appeals to me / pleases me.
In many cases, the two are close in meaning, but plaire can sound slightly more about how something suits your taste or appeals to you.
In this sentence, that works well because the speaker is comparing how the soup feels in different months.
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