1. Topic Introduction
C’est and ce sont are among the most frequently used structures in French because they help you:
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- identify things
- describe objects
- introduce ideas
- present nouns clearly
They often correspond to English “it is,” “this is,” “that is,” and “these are / those are.”
Examples:
| French Sentence | Meaning | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| C’est un livre. | It is a book | say tun leevr |
| Ce sont mes amis. | They are my friends / These are my friends | suh son may zah-mee |
This lesson is extremely important because French uses c’est very differently from il est.
2. What Does Ce Mean?
Ce is a demonstrative form that means:
- this
- that
- it
It does not change meaning by itself, but changes form depending on grammar.
| Form | Use |
|---|---|
| ce | before consonant in full structures |
| c’ | before vowel sound |
Examples:
| French | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Ce livre | this book |
| C’est | it is / this is |
Important:
Before vowels, ce becomes c’.
| Incorrect | Correct |
|---|---|
| Ce est | C’est |
3. Structure of C’est
C’est = ce + est
| Part | Meaning |
|---|---|
| ce | this / that / it |
| est | is |
So:
C’est = it is / this is / that is
Basic Pattern
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| C’est + noun | C’est une table. |
| C’est + adjective | C’est important. |
| C’est + name | C’est Marie. |
4. Using C’est with Singular Nouns
When introducing one person or one thing, use c’est.
| French Sentence | Meaning | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| C’est un stylo. | It is a pen | say tun stee-lo |
| C’est une maison. | It is a house | say tun may-zon |
| C’est mon frère. | This is my brother | say mon frer |
| C’est la voiture de Paul. | It is Paul’s car | say lah vwa-tyur duh pol |
Important:
Even if noun gender changes, c’est remains unchanged.
| Gender | Sentence |
|---|---|
| masculine | C’est un garçon. |
| feminine | C’est une fille. |
5. Using Ce sont with Plural Nouns
When introducing plural nouns, French uses ce sont.
Structure
| Form | Meaning |
|---|---|
| ce sont | these are / those are / they are |
Examples
| French Sentence | Meaning | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|
| Ce sont des livres. | These are books | suh son day leevr |
| Ce sont mes parents. | These are my parents | suh son may pah-rahn |
| Ce sont des étudiants. | They are students | suh son day zay-tu-dyan |
Important:
Plural noun → use ce sont
6. Singular vs Plural Comparison
| Singular | Plural |
|---|---|
| C’est un chat. | Ce sont des chats. |
| C’est une table. | Ce sont des tables. |
| C’est mon ami. | Ce sont mes amis. |
Rule
| If noun is… | Use |
|---|---|
| singular | c’est |
| plural | ce sont |
7. Using C’est with Names
French commonly uses c’est before names.
| French Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est Sophie. | This is Sophie |
| C’est mon professeur. | This is my teacher |
| C’est Monsieur Bernard. | This is Mr Bernard |
Plural Names
| French Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Ce sont Sophie et Claire. | These are Sophie and Claire |
8. Using C’est with Pronouns
With stressed pronouns, c’est is common.
| French Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est moi. | It is me |
| C’est toi. | It is you |
| C’est lui. | It is him |
| C’est elle. | It is her |
| C’est nous. | It is us |
| C’est eux. | It is them |
These are very common in spoken French.
Example
| French Dialogue | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Qui est là ? | Who is there? |
| C’est moi. | It is me |
9. Using C’est with Adjectives
When adjective describes a general idea, c’est is used.
| French Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est facile. | It is easy |
| C’est difficile. | It is difficult |
| C’est intéressant. | It is interesting |
| C’est normal. | It is normal |
Important:
No noun needed here.
10. C’est + Article + Noun
French usually keeps article after c’est.
| French Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est un problème. | It is a problem |
| C’est une idée. | It is an idea |
| C’est le directeur. | He is the director / This is the director |
Important Rule
Article usually remains.
Incorrect: C’est professeur.
Correct: C’est un professeur.
11. Negative Form
Negation surrounds être.
Structure
Ce n’est pas
Ce ne sont pas
Examples
| French Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Ce n’est pas un livre. | It is not a book |
| Ce n’est pas facile. | It is not easy |
| Ce ne sont pas mes clés. | These are not my keys |
Comparison
| Positive | Negative |
|---|---|
| C’est un chat. | Ce n’est pas un chat. |
| Ce sont des amis. | Ce ne sont pas des amis. |
12. Questions with C’est
Structure
| Question | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est quoi ? | What is it? |
| C’est qui ? | Who is it? |
Examples
| French Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est quoi ? | What is this? |
| C’est qui ? | Who is this? |
| Ce sont qui ? | Who are they? |
13. Difference Between C’est and Il est
This is one of the most important French distinctions.
Use C’est when noun follows
| French | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est un médecin. | He is a doctor |
Use Il est when adjective or profession without article follows
| French | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Il est médecin. | He is a doctor |
| Il est intelligent. | He is intelligent |
Comparison
| Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est un médecin. | This is a doctor / He is a doctor |
| Il est médecin. | He is a doctor |
Important:
Profession with article → c’est
Profession without article → il est
14. Frequent Errors to Avoid
| Incorrect | Correct | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Ce est | C’est | contraction required |
| C’est des livres | Ce sont des livres | plural noun |
| Ce sont un livre | C’est un livre | singular noun |
15. Vocabulary
| French Word | Gender | Meaning | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|---|
| le livre | masculine | book | luh leevr |
| la maison | feminine | house | lah may-zon |
| le médecin | masculine | doctor | luh may-duh-san |
| la clé | feminine | key | lah clay |
| le problème | masculine | problem | luh pro-blem |
| l’idée | feminine | idea | lee-day |
| l’ami | masculine | friend | lah-mee |
| l’amie | feminine | friend | lah-mee |
| le professeur | masculine | teacher | luh pro-fay-sur |
| la table | feminine | table | lah tabl |
16. Mini Paragraph
C’est ma maison. C’est une petite maison, mais elle est confortable. Ce sont mes livres sur la table. C’est mon stylo noir. Ce ne sont pas mes clés, ce sont les clés de ma sœur.
Meaning:
This is my house. It is a small house, but it is comfortable. These are my books on the table. This is my black pen. These are not my keys, they are my sister’s keys.
17. Memory Practice
| French Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| C’est un livre. | It is a book |
| Ce sont des livres. | These are books |
| C’est mon ami. | This is my friend |
| Ce sont mes parents. | These are my parents |
| Ce n’est pas difficile. | It is not difficult |
| C’est moi. | It is me |
| C’est qui ? | Who is it? |
Summary Notes
| Concept | Key Rule |
|---|---|
| c’est | singular noun / idea / name |
| ce sont | plural noun |
| contraction | ce + est = c’est |
| names | use c’est |
| pronouns | c’est moi, c’est toi |
| adjective | c’est facile |
| negative | ce n’est pas / ce ne sont pas |
| question | c’est quoi ? |
| major distinction | noun often uses c’est |
| key learning point | singular = c’est, plural = ce sont |
The most important lesson today is this: always look first at the noun — if it is singular, use c’est; if it is plural, use ce sont.