est-ce que
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɛs.kə/
France (Lyon) (file) (file)
Particle
- Used to introduce a yes-or-no question.
- Est-ce que tu veux une chambre ?
- Do you want a bedroom ?
- Est-ce qu’elle est arrivée ?
- Has she arrived?
- Est-ce que tu veux une chambre ?
- Used after a preposed interrogative to introduce the remainder of the question.
- Quand est-ce que les élèves retournent à l’école ?
- When do the students return to school?
- Combien de musées est-ce qu’il y a en France ?
- How many museums are there in France?
- Quand est-ce que les élèves retournent à l’école ?
Usage notes
- Before a vowel, est-ce que becomes est-ce qu’. Example:
- est-ce qu’elle
- est-ce qu’il
- In older forms of French, and in more formal registers of present-day French, the role of est-ce que is often fulfilled by subject-verb inversion:
- Quand viendrez-vous ?
- When will you come?
- Quand viendrez-vous ?
- In fact, est-ce que itself results from subject-verb inversion; it comes from c’est que.
- In colloquial French, yes-or-no questions are often indicated solely by punctuation (in writing) or intonation (in speech), with no special lexical or syntactic marker:
- Tu es prête ?
- You ready?
- Tu es prête ?
- Similarly, non–yes-or-no questions often use the same structure as statements, with question words not being preposed:
- Il a dit quoi ?
- He said what?
- Il a dit quoi ?
- In informal or colloquial French, question syntax is often used in indirect questions:
- Il veut savoir où est-ce qu’ils habitent.
- He wants to know where they live.
- Il veut savoir où est-ce qu’ils habitent.
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