Négation pluriel

Joakim R.C1Kwiziq Q&A regular contributor

Négation pluriel

"We don't eat baby rabbits" -> "Nous ne mangeons pas de lapereau" selon un quiz. Je sais que 'des' devient 'de' dans les phrases négatives, mais pourquoi pas 'lapereaux'?
Asked 8 years ago
AurélieNative French expert teacher in KwiziqCorrect answer
"un"and "une" also become "de" in negative sentences, see:

Un/une become de/d' in negative sentences in French (French Indefinite Articles)
AurélieNative French expert teacher in Kwiziq
Bonjour Joakim ! In French, you could use either, with a slight nuance of meaning: "On ne mange pas de lapereau." would mean "We don't eat baby rabbit" in general, as a type of meat here. If you consider the baby rabbits as countable elements, then you could also use the plural: "On ne mange pas de lapereaux." I hope that's helpful!

Négation pluriel

"We don't eat baby rabbits" -> "Nous ne mangeons pas de lapereau" selon un quiz. Je sais que 'des' devient 'de' dans les phrases négatives, mais pourquoi pas 'lapereaux'?

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