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Grammaire 2: personal information (numbers beyond 100)

On étudie !

Structure : Les dates

When you travel to a French part of the world, you will need to provide information about your identity to authorities in customs (e.g., date of birth, nationality, address, etc.). When you meet new people, you may want to give them your phone number or email. Or you will perhaps fill out a questionnaire for a doctor’s visit or some other activity. In this section, we will look at ways to provide personal info, or des renseignements personnels.

 

(a) To talk about the date, we always give the day before the name of the month. Simply use the structure below:

C’est le premier,  [numéro 2-31] [mois] [année]
C’est le premier octobre 2024
C’est le 2 octobre 2024
C’est le 3 (etc.) octobre 2024

 

Quelle est la date aujourd’hui? C’est le 20 (vingt) octobre deux-mille-vingt-quatre. (What is today’s date? It is October 20th 2024.)

 

(b) To ask about someone’s birthday or birthdate (or to say yours), follow these set expressions:

Mon anniversaire est le treize septembre. My birthday is September 13.

Je suis né(e) en 2004.   I was born in 2004. *use if the subject is masculine and née, if feminine.

(c) To express age, use avoir + number + ans.

Quel âge as-tu/Quel âge avez-vous? J’ai (21) ans. (How old are you (informal/formal)? I am 21 years old)

 

(d) Numbers are important for les numéros de téléphone, les adresses, les codes postaux (postal codes), and les années (years). In Europe, a phone number comes in groups of two or three numbers whether written or spoken (i.e. 01 23 45 67 89). Postal codes are also numerical. Codes for Paris go from 75001 to 75020, the final 2 digits correspond to the arrondissements (neighbourhoods/districts) which are known by their numbers.  So let’s look at the numbers beyond 100.

Numéros 100+

Chiffres Nombres Chiffres Nombres Chiffres Nombres
100 cent 400 quatre cents 1 000 mille
101 cent un 500 cinq cents 10 000 dix mille
102 cent deux 600 six cents 100 000 cent mille
103 cent trois 700 sept cents 1 000 000 un million (de)
200 deux cents 800 huit cents 2 000 000 deux millions (de)
300 trois cents 900 neuf cents 1 000 000 000 un milliard (de)
2 000 000 000 deux milliards (de)


So…. to say 1990 in French, we say: Mille-neuf-cent-quatre-vingt-dix. Or dix-neuf-cent quatre-vingt-dix.

Notes

  1. The -s of cents is eliminated when followed by another number.
  2. Mille never takes an -s.
  3. We use en when we say “in what year” something happened:  Il est né en 1987.                 (He was born in 1987)
  4. We always (always!) use le when it is a specific date:                                              Il est né le 14 juillet 1987    (He was born on July 14 1987)

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