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French Adjectives: Rules, Agreement & Common Examples

French Adjectives: Rules, Agreement & Common Examples

👉 French grammar »

French adjectives (les adjectifs) describe people, places, and things. Unlike English, French adjectives must agree with the nouns they modify in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural). Most adjectives come after the noun, but some common adjectives—including BAGS adjectives—come before it.

This lesson explains adjective placement, agreement, common spelling patterns, and includes a list of frequently used French adjectives.

BAGS adjectives
Adjective placement
Forming the feminine
Forming the plural
Adjectives with changing meanings
30 common French adjectives

French Adjectives – Rules, agreement and common examples

What are French adjectives?

French adjectives describe or modify nouns.

Examples:

un livre intéressantan interesting book
une voiture rougea red car
des étudiants intelligentsintelligent students

BAGS adjectives

Most French adjectives come after the noun they modify. However, many adjectives expressing Beauty, Age, Goodness, and Size (BAGS) come before the noun.

CategoryCommon adjectives
Beautybeau, belle (beautiful); joli, jolie (pretty)
Agejeune (young); vieux, vieille (old); nouveau, nouvelle (new)
Goodnessbon, bonne (good); mauvais, mauvaise (bad)
Sizegrand, grande (big, tall); petit, petite (small); gros, grosse (fat, big); long, longue (long)

Examples:

un vieux filman old movie
une nouvelle maisona new house
une jolie fillea pretty girl
un petit garçona little boy
une belle villea beautiful city
un long voyagea long trip

Adjective placement

With the exception of many BAGS adjectives and a few other common words, French adjectives are placed after the noun.

Examples:

le ciel bleuthe blue sky
une voiture rougea red car
un homme intelligentan intelligent man
une personne sympathiquea nice person

Forming the feminine

Most adjectives simply add -e

EnglishMasculineFeminine
big, tallgrandgrande
bluebleubleue
graygrisgrise
Americanaméricainaméricaine
intelligentintelligentintelligente

Examples:

un grand garçona big boy
une grande fillea tall girl

un homme américainan American man
une femme américainean American woman

Adjectives already ending in -e

If the masculine form already ends in -e, it usually stays the same in the feminine.

EnglishMasculineFeminine
shytimidetimide
fastrapiderapide
difficultdifficiledifficile
redrougerouge

Examples:

un garçon timidea shy boy
une fille timidea shy girl

un train rapidea fast train
une voiture rapidea fast car

Common spelling changes

PatternMasculineFeminineEnglish
-eux → -euseheureuxheureusehappy
-f → -veactifactiveactive
Double final consonantbonbonnegood
-er → -èrepremierpremièrefirst
-et → -ètesecretsecrètesecretive
-et → -ettemuetmuettemute

Examples:

un homme heureuxa happy man
une femme heureusea happy woman

un garçon sportifan athletic boy
une fille sportivean athletic girl

un homme canadiena Canadian man
une femme canadiennea Canadian woman

un homme cruela cruel man
une femme cruellea cruel woman

Irregular adjectives

Some adjectives have highly irregular masculine and feminine forms.

EnglishMasculineFeminine
beautifulbeaubelle
crazyfoufolle
newnouveaunouvelle
oldvieuxvieille
whiteblancblanche
softdouxdouce
false, wrongfauxfausse
longlonglongue
publicpublicpublique
drysecsèche

Forming the plural

French adjectives must also agree with nouns in number. Most simply add -s.

SingularPluralEnglish
intelligentintelligentsintelligent
petitepetitessmall
grandgrandsbig, tall

Examples:

un homme intelligenta smart man
des hommes intelligentssmart men

une petite maisona small house
des petites maisonssmall houses

un grand garçona big boy
des grands garçonsbig boys

Adjectives ending in -s or -x

These usually do not change in the masculine plural.

un garçon françaisa French boy
des garçons françaisFrench boys

un homme courageuxa brave man
des hommes courageuxbrave men

Adjectives ending in -al

Many adjectives ending in -al change to -aux in the masculine plural.

un homme géniala brilliant man
des hommes géniauxbrilliant men

Adjectives ending in -eau

These generally add -x in the masculine plural.

un beau paysagea beautiful landscape
de beaux paysagesbeautiful landscapes

un nouveau camiona new truck
de nouveaux camionsnew trucks

Adjectives whose meaning changes with position

Some French adjectives can appear either before or after the noun. Their meaning changes depending on their position.

Before the nounMeaningAfter the nounMeaning
un ancien amia former friendun livre ancienan old book
un cher amia dear friendune voiture chèrean expensive car
ma propre voituremy own carune voiture proprea clean car
mon pauvre amimy poor friendun pays pauvrea poor country
le mois prochainnext monthle prochain moisthe following month
le mois dernierlast monthla dernière pagethe last page

30 common French adjectives

EnglishMasculineFeminine
oldvieuxvieille
youngjeunejeune
goodbonbonne
badmauvaismauvaise
big, tallgrandgrande
smallpetitpetite
happyheureuxheureuse
sadtristetriste
nicesympathiquesympathique
meanméchantméchante
politepolipolie
impoliteimpoliimpolie
prettyjolijolie
beautifulbeaubelle
uglylaidlaide
strongfortforte
weakfaiblefaible
expensivecherchère
inexpensivebon marchébon marché
fatgrosgrosse
thinmaigremaigre
horriblehorriblehorrible
wonderfulformidableformidable
smartintelligentintelligente
stupidstupidestupide
interestingintéressantintéressante
boringennuyeuxennuyeuse
richricheriche
poorpauvrepauvre
longlonglongue

Summary

  • French adjectives must agree with the nouns they modify in gender and number.
  • Most adjectives come after the noun.
  • Many adjectives describing Beauty, Age, Goodness, and Size (BAGS) come before the noun.
  • The feminine form is often created by adding -e, but many common adjectives have irregular spelling changes.
  • Some adjectives, such as ancien, cher, and pauvre, change meaning depending on whether they appear before or after the noun.

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David Issokson Founder & French Teacher at FrenchLearner.com
David Issokson is the founder of FrenchLearner.com, where he’s been helping students master French through vocabulary, grammar, and cultural lessons since 2012.

    David Issokson

    About the Author โ€“ David Issokson David Issokson is an online French teacher and the founder of FrenchLearner.com (established 2012). He has been teaching French online since 2014 and brings over 30 years of experience as a passionate French learner and fluent speaker. David creates clear, structured lessons supported by native audio recorded by Marie Assel Cambier, a professional voice artist and native French speaker. A graduate of McGill University in Montreal, he has taught hundreds of learners worldwide and publishes daily French lessons for more than 13,000 email subscribers. ๐Ÿ“˜ About David ยป ๐ŸŒ Davidโ€™s personal site ยป ๐Ÿ‘ Follow on Facebook ยป

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