Je crois que ces deux modèles sont pareils.

Breakdown of Je crois que ces deux modèles sont pareils.

je
I
être
to be
que
that
croire
to believe
ces
these
deux
two
le modèle
the model
pareil
same

Questions & Answers about Je crois que ces deux modèles sont pareils.

Why is it Je crois que... and not just Je crois...?

In French, que is normally needed to introduce a full clause after croire.

  • Je crois que ces deux modèles sont pareils. = I think/believe that these two models are alike.

English often drops that, but French usually keeps que here.

You can say Je crois on its own, but then it means something like I think so or I believe so, not the full sentence that follows.

What exactly does crois mean here?

Crois is the je form of the verb croire, which means to believe or to think.

So:

  • je crois = I believe / I think

In everyday French, je crois que... often sounds like I think that..., not necessarily a strong statement of faith or certainty.

Why is it ces deux modèles and not deux ces modèles?

In French, demonstrative adjectives like ce / cet / cette / ces come before numbers.

So the normal order is:

  • ces deux modèles = these two models

Not:

  • deux ces modèles

The order is:

  1. demonstrative adjective
  2. number
  3. noun
Why is it ces?

Ces is the plural form of the demonstrative adjective, meaning these or those.

Because modèles is plural, you need ces:

  • ce modèle = this model
  • ces modèles = these models

Adding deux makes it specifically these two models.

Why is modèles plural?

Because the sentence is talking about two models.

  • un modèle = one model
  • deux modèles = two models

In French, after a number greater than one, the noun is usually plural, just like in English.

Why is the verb sont plural?

The subject of the clause is ces deux modèles, which is plural, so the verb être must also be plural:

  • ces deux modèles sont... = these two models are...

If it were singular, you would say:

  • ce modèle est pareil = this model is similar/alike
Why is it pareils with an s?

Pareil is an adjective, and in French adjectives usually agree with the noun they describe.

Here, modèles is plural, so the adjective must also be plural:

  • singular masculine: pareil
  • singular feminine: pareille
  • plural masculine (or mixed): pareils
  • plural feminine: pareilles

Since modèles is plural, you get pareils.

What does pareils mean here? Is it exactly the same as the same?

Not exactly.

Pareil usually means similar, alike, or pretty much the same. It often suggests resemblance rather than absolute identity.

So:

  • Ces deux modèles sont pareils. = These two models are alike / look the same / are similar.

If you want to stress total identity, French often uses:

  • identiques = identical
  • les mêmes = the same ones

So pareils is close to the same, but often a little less absolute.

Why doesn’t pareils use à, like in pareil à?

Good question. Pareil can be used in two common ways:

  1. with être, comparing things generally

  2. with à, comparing one thing to another specific thing

    • Ce modèle est pareil à l’autre. = This model is like the other one.

In your sentence, the two models are being described together as alike, so à is not necessary.

Could I say semblables or identiques instead of pareils?

Yes, but the meaning changes a little.

  • pareils = alike, very similar, much the same
  • semblables = similar, resembling each other, a bit more formal
  • identiques = identical, exactly the same

So:

  • Ces deux modèles sont pareils. sounds natural and everyday.
  • Ces deux modèles sont semblables. is correct but slightly more formal.
  • Ces deux modèles sont identiques. is stronger.
Is modèle only used for fashion models?

No. Modèle has several meanings in French, just like model in English.

Depending on context, it can mean:

  • a product model
  • a design or pattern
  • a prototype
  • a fashion model
  • an example

So in ces deux modèles, the exact meaning depends on the wider context.

Could I replace Je crois que with Je pense que?

Yes. Both are very common.

  • Je crois que... = I think / I believe that...
  • Je pense que... = I think that...

In many everyday situations, they are very close.
Sometimes je crois que can sound a bit more like I believe or I suppose, while je pense que can sound a bit more direct, but in normal conversation the difference is often small.

How is Je crois que ces deux modèles sont pareils pronounced?

A careful approximate pronunciation is:

zhuh krwar kuh say duh mo-del suh pa-ray

A few useful points:

  • Je sounds like zhuh
  • crois sounds roughly like krwa
  • que is usually a short kuh
  • ces sounds like say
  • deux sounds like duh with a French vowel
  • modèles sounds like mo-del
  • sont has a nasal vowel, roughly sohn without a strong final n
  • pareils sounds like pa-ray

In natural speech, it flows together quite smoothly.

Is there any special liaison in this sentence?

There can be, depending on how carefully or formally someone speaks.

Possible liaisons include:

  • ces‿deux
  • sont‿pareils is less standard as a strong liaison point in careful teaching terms; many speakers simply link smoothly without making it especially noticeable

The most useful thing for a learner is to know that French words often connect in speech, so the sentence may sound more fluid than the spelling suggests.

Can French drop que here the way English drops that?

Normally, no.

English can say:

  • I think these two models are alike.

French generally needs:

Leaving out que would sound wrong in standard French.

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