Bonjour!

French grammar · A2-B1

Quantifiers

A clear, example-first explanation built for CLB 6 / B1 — the level you need for TCF / TEF Canada.

Overview

Quantifiers tell how much or how many. Most use de (not du/de la/des) before the noun — this is the key trap. Tout agrees in gender and number; the others don't.

Quantity expressions: ALWAYS + de (no article)

After these expressions, use de alone — never du, de la, or des.

TOUT — agrees with the noun

Tout means "all / every / the whole." It changes form to match the following noun.

toutm sg — tout le monde, tout le jour
toutef sg — toute la classe, toute la journée
tousm pl — tous les jours, tous mes amis
toutesf pl — toutes les femmes, toutes les nuits

TOUT examples in context

Note: tous les jours = every day; toute la journée = the whole day. Same root, different meaning.

Indefinite quantifiers

These go directly before the noun (no de).

Common trap: des → de

After a negative or a quantity expression, des becomes de.

Free practice

Drill this in the app

Open the grammar trainer to practise this point with instant feedback and spaced review — free, no signup.

Open the grammar trainer

More grammar

Articles: le, la, les, un, une, des · Verb: être (to be) — Present · Verb: avoir (to have) — Present · Regular -er Verbs (Present) · Negation: ne ... pas · Asking Questions

See the full grammar guide →

← Back to Bonjour!