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🇫🇷A2

A2 French GrammarObject Pronouns (Direct & Indirect)

Master French direct and indirect object pronouns to make your sentences more natural. Learn me, te, le, la, nous, vous, les (direct) and me, te, lui, nous, vous, leur (indirect). Understand where to place these pronouns in sentences and how to use them with different verb tenses.

1Direct Object Pronouns (le, la, les)

Direct object pronouns replace nouns that receive the action directly: Je vois le livre → Je le vois. The pronouns are me (me), te (you), le (him/it), la (her/it), nous (us), vous (you), les (them). They go before the conjugated verb in simple tenses: Je le mange. Le and la become l' before vowels.

Direct Object Pronouns

PersonSingularPluralMeaning
1stme (m')nousme, us
2ndte (t')vousyou
3rd mascle (l')leshim/it, them
3rd femla (l')lesher/it, them

Examples

Je regarde le film. → Je le regarde.

I watch the movie. → I watch it.

le replaces masculine noun

Elle aime la musique. → Elle l'aime.

She loves music. → She loves it.

la → l' before vowel

Nous voyons les enfants. → Nous les voyons.

We see the children. → We see them.

les replaces plural noun

Il me comprend.

He understands me.

me = direct object (1st person)

2Indirect Object Pronouns (lui, leur)

Indirect object pronouns replace nouns that receive the action indirectly, typically after 'à': Je parle à Marie → Je lui parle. The pronouns are me (to me), te (to you), lui (to him/her), nous (to us), vous (to you), leur (to them). Unlike direct pronouns, lui and leur are the same for masculine and feminine.

Indirect Object Pronouns

PersonSingularPluralMeaning
1stme (m')nousto me, to us
2ndte (t')vousto you
3rdluileurto him/her, to them

Examples

Je parle à Pierre. → Je lui parle.

I speak to Pierre. → I speak to him.

lui replaces Ă  + person

Elle donne un cadeau à ses parents. → Elle leur donne un cadeau.

She gives a gift to her parents. → She gives them a gift.

leur = to them

Il m'envoie un message.

He sends me a message.

m' = to me (indirect)

Tu lui téléphones souvent?

Do you call him/her often?

téléphoner à → lui

3Pronoun Placement in Sentences

Object pronouns go before the conjugated verb in simple tenses: Je le vois. In compound tenses, they go before the auxiliary: Je l'ai vu. With infinitives, they go before the infinitive: Je veux le voir. In negative sentences, pronouns stay between ne and the verb: Je ne le vois pas.

Pronoun Placement

ConstructionStructureExampleTranslation
Simple tensepronoun + verbJe le mange.I eat it.
Passé composépronoun + avoir/êtreJe l'ai mangé.I ate it.
Infinitiveverb + pronoun + infinitiveJe veux le manger.I want to eat it.
Negativene + pronoun + verb + pasJe ne le mange pas.I don't eat it.

Examples

Je l'ai vu hier.

I saw him/it yesterday.

l' before auxiliary (ai)

Elle ne les comprend pas.

She doesn't understand them.

les between ne and verb

Je vais lui téléphoner demain.

I'm going to call him/her tomorrow.

lui before infinitive

Tu peux me l'expliquer?

Can you explain it to me?

two pronouns before infinitive

4Common Verbs with Indirect Objects

Many French verbs take indirect objects with à: parler à (to speak to), téléphoner à (to call), donner à (to give to), dire à (to say to), demander à (to ask). Some verbs take indirect objects in French but direct objects in English, like répondre à quelqu'un (to answer someone).

Verbs with Indirect Objects

VerbMeaningStructureWith Pronoun
parler Ă to speak toparler Ă  qqnJe lui parle.
téléphoner àto calltéléphoner à qqnJe lui téléphone.
donner Ă to give todonner qqch Ă  qqnJe lui donne.
répondre àto answerrépondre à qqnJe lui réponds.

Examples

Je lui ai parlé ce matin.

I spoke to him/her this morning.

parler à → lui

Elle leur écrit des lettres.

She writes letters to them.

écrire à → leur

Tu lui as répondu?

Did you answer him/her?

répondre à → lui

Nous leur avons offert un cadeau.

We gave them a gift.

offrir à → leur