Breakdown of J’ai envie de me promener au bord de la mer ce soir.
Questions & Answers about J’ai envie de me promener au bord de la mer ce soir.
Why is it J’ai and not Je ai?
What does avoir envie de mean, and why isn’t it just vouloir?
Avoir envie de literally means to have a desire to, but in everyday English it often means:
So J’ai envie de me promener means something like I feel like taking a walk.
Why not vouloir?
- vouloir = to want
- avoir envie de often sounds softer, more personal, and more like a current feeling
- vouloir can sometimes sound more direct or stronger
Compare:
Why is there a de after envie?
Because the fixed expression is avoir envie de + infinitive.
So you say:
- avoir envie de manger = to feel like eating
- avoir envie de sortir = to feel like going out
- avoir envie de dormir = to feel like sleeping
Here:
- J’ai envie de me promener
Why is it me promener and not just promener?
Because the verb here is se promener, which is a pronominal/reflexive verb.
- se promener = to go for a walk / to take a walk / to stroll
When you use it with je, se changes to me:
- je me promène = I go for a walk
- j’aime me promener = I like going for a walk
- j’ai envie de me promener = I feel like going for a walk
In other words, the infinitive stays promener, but the reflexive pronoun changes to match the subject:
- me for je
- te for tu
- se for il/elle/on
- nous, vous, se
Is se promener really reflexive in meaning? Am I literally walking myself?
Not really in natural English. Even though it uses a reflexive pronoun in French, it usually just means:
- to go for a walk
- to take a walk
- to stroll
So you should usually learn it as a single unit: se promener.
French uses reflexive forms more often than English does. So while the grammar is reflexive, the natural translation often is not.
What does au bord de la mer mean exactly?
Au bord de la mer means by the sea, at the seaside, or along the seashore, depending on context.
Breakdown:
- au = à + le
- bord = edge / side / shore
- de la mer = of the sea
So literally it is something like at the edge of the sea.
In natural English, this sentence could be translated as:
- by the sea
- at the seaside
- along the seafront
- on the seashore
depending on the exact situation.
Why is it au bord and not à le bord?
Why is it de la mer and not du mer?
What does ce soir mean, and why is it at the end?
Ce soir means this evening or tonight.
French often puts time expressions toward the end of the sentence, especially after the main idea.
So:
This sounds very natural in French.
You could think of the sentence structure as:
- I feel like
- going for a walk
- by the sea
- tonight
- by the sea
- going for a walk
French word order is often more flexible than English, but this end position for ce soir is very common and natural.
Could ce soir mean both this evening and tonight?
Could I also say J’ai envie d’aller me promener...?
Yes, absolutely.
- J’ai envie de me promener... = I feel like going for a walk...
- J’ai envie d’aller me promener... = I feel like going to take a walk...
Adding aller can make it sound a little more like to go out for a walk, but both are natural.
The version in your sentence is simpler and very idiomatic.
How would this sentence sound if I changed it to the present tense with je me promène?
It would mean something different.
- Je me promène au bord de la mer ce soir. = I’m taking a walk by the sea tonight / I walk by the sea tonight.
- J’ai envie de me promener au bord de la mer ce soir. = I feel like taking a walk by the sea tonight.
So:
- je me promène describes the action itself
- j’ai envie de me promener describes the desire or feeling
That distinction is important.
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