A1 Collocation Neutral 6 Min. Lesezeit

avoir faim

to be hungry

Wörtlich: to have hunger

In 15 Sekunden

  • Uses the verb `avoir` (to have), not `être` (to be).
  • Standard, neutral way to say you're hungry in any situation.
  • Can be intensified with `très` or `trop` for emphasis.
  • Essential for restaurant visits and social gatherings in France.

Bedeutung

Im Französischen ist man nicht hungrig, sondern man 'hat' Hunger. Es ist die Standardart, jemandem mitzuteilen, dass der Magen knurrt.

Wichtige Beispiele

3 von 10
1

Texting a friend about dinner

Salut ! J'ai faim, on va au resto ce soir ?

Hey! I'm hungry, are we going to a restaurant tonight?

2

At a café ordering food

J'ai une petite faim, je vais prendre un croissant.

I'm a little hungry, I'll have a croissant.

3

Talking to a colleague at noon

Il est midi, vous n'avez pas faim ?

It's noon, aren't you guys hungry?

🌍

Kultureller Hintergrund

Lunch is a major event. Saying 'J'ai faim' at 12:30 is expected. Similar usage, but 'avoir la dalle' is less common.

💡

Remember the 'Have'

Always think 'I have hunger' to avoid the 'I am' mistake.

In 15 Sekunden

  • Uses the verb `avoir` (to have), not `être` (to be).
  • Standard, neutral way to say you're hungry in any situation.
  • Can be intensified with `très` or `trop` for emphasis.
  • Essential for restaurant visits and social gatherings in France.

What It Means

Imagine you are sitting in a cozy Parisian café. The smell of fresh croissants fills the air. Your stomach suddenly makes a loud, demanding growl. In English, you would say, "I am hungry." But in French, hunger is something you possess. You don't become hunger; you simply carry it with you until you eat. This phrase is the foundation of French survival. It is used by everyone from toddlers to presidents. It describes that universal physical pull toward food. Whether you want a snack or a five-course meal, this is your starting point. It is simple, direct, and incredibly common in daily life.

How To Use It

To use this phrase, you need the verb avoir. This is the most important rule to remember. You conjugate avoir based on who is feeling the hunger. For yourself, you say j'ai faim. For a friend, you say tu as faim. If you are really starving, you can add très before faim. For example, j'ai très faim means "I am very hungry." You can also use tellement for extra drama. J'ai tellement faim ! is perfect for those long meetings. It works in any tense, like j'avais faim for the past. Just remember that faim stays the same. Only the verb avoir changes its clothes to match the subject.

Real-Life Examples

You will hear this phrase everywhere in France. Imagine texting your roommate after a long day at work. You send: "J'ai faim, on commande une pizza ?" This is the modern way to suggest dinner. On Instagram, you might see a photo of a giant burger. The caption could simply be: "J'ai trop faim rien qu'en regardant ça !" Even in professional settings, it pops up. During a long Zoom call, someone might say, "On a tous faim, faisons une pause." It is the ultimate social bridge. Hunger is the one thing everyone agrees on. It is the perfect excuse to stop working and start eating. Even Alexa or Siri understand j'ai faim perfectly when you're looking for nearby bistros.

When To Use It

Use it whenever your stomach is empty. It is appropriate for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks. Use it when you are browsing a menu at a restaurant. Use it when you are visiting your French grandmother. Use it when you are hiking and need a protein bar. It is a neutral phrase that fits every social level. You can say it to your boss or your best friend. It is also great for travel vlogging. If you are filming a "What I Eat in Paris" video, start here. It sets the scene for every culinary adventure. It is the green light for the most important part of French culture: the meal.

When NOT To Use It

Do not use this to describe a metaphorical "hunger" for power. For that, French usually uses different words like soif de pouvoir. Don't use it if you just want to taste something for fun. That would be avoir envie de goûter. Also, avoid using it to mean you are "starving" in a medical sense. There are stronger words for extreme famine. If you are just a little bit peckish, it might be too strong. In that case, use the "little hollow" expression mentioned later. Don't use it to describe a car's need for fuel. That sounds like a weird Pixar movie plot. Keep it strictly for humans and pets who need a bowl of kibble.

Common Mistakes

  • Je suis faim → ✓ J'ai faim (The most classic learner mistake ever!)
  • Je suis très faim → ✓ J'ai très faim (Hunger is a noun here, not an adjective.)
  • J'ai beaucoup de faim → ✓ J'ai très faim (We use adverbs of intensity, not quantities of hunger.)
  • Tu es faim ? → ✓ Tu as faim ? (Asking a friend requires the verb avoir.)
  • J'ai faim pour une pizza → ✓ J'ai faim, je veux une pizza (In French, we don't usually say we are "hungry for" a specific item this way.)
  • Je sens faim → ✓ J'ai faim (Don't translate "I feel hungry" literally; just use "have.")

Similar Expressions

If you aren't quite ready for a full meal, try avoir un petit creux. This literally means "to have a little hole" in your stomach. It is the perfect way to say you need a snack. If you are absolutely dying of hunger, use mourir de faim. It is dramatic, which the French love. J'ai la dalle is a very common slang version. Use it with friends, but maybe not your French father-in-law. Avoir l'estomac dans les talons is a funny idiom. It means your stomach has dropped into your heels. That is one long journey for a piece of cheese! These variations add flavor to your vocabulary and make you sound like a local.

Common Variations

You can tweak this phrase to show exactly how hungry you are. J'ai une faim de loup means you have the "hunger of a wolf." It implies you could eat everything on the table. J'ai une petite faim is for when you just want a yogurt. You can also turn it into a question: Vous avez faim ? This is the polite way to host guests. If you are talking about the past, use j'avais très faim. In the future, it becomes j'aurai faim. These variations are like the seasonings on a steak. They make the basic phrase much more interesting and precise.

Memory Trick

💡

Think of the English word "famine." It starts with the same letters as faim. Now, imagine you HAVE a tiny Famine airplane landing in your stomach. You don't ARE the airplane; you HAVE the airplane. This helps you remember to use avoir and links the French word to its English cousin. Or, imagine a mime holding a giant sign that says "I HAVE HUNGER." He is pointing at his stomach and looking very sad. Visualizing the possession of the feeling is the key. You own your hunger like you own your phone. Don't let go of it until you find a baguette!

Quick FAQ

Is j'ai faim formal or informal? It is actually both! It is a neutral phrase that works in any situation. Can I say je suis faim if I'm really tired? No, that will just make French people look at you funny. Why does French use avoir for this? It is just the way the language views physical sensations like hunger, thirst, and heat. Can I use it for my cat? Yes, if your cat is meowing at 5 AM, il a faim is the perfect description. Is there a slang version? Yes, j'ai la dalle is very popular with younger people. Should I pronounce the 'm' at the end? Not really, it is a nasal sound like the 'an' in 'pardon' but with a different vowel shape.

Nutzungshinweise

The phrase is perfectly neutral and safe for all social settings. The biggest 'gotcha' is using the verb 'être' instead of 'avoir'. Always remember that hunger is treated as a noun you possess in French.

💡

Remember the 'Have'

Always think 'I have hunger' to avoid the 'I am' mistake.

Beispiele

10
#1 Texting a friend about dinner

Salut ! J'ai faim, on va au resto ce soir ?

Hey! I'm hungry, are we going to a restaurant tonight?

A very common way to start a social plan.

#2 At a café ordering food

J'ai une petite faim, je vais prendre un croissant.

I'm a little hungry, I'll have a croissant.

Use 'petite faim' for a snack or light craving.

#3 Talking to a colleague at noon

Il est midi, vous n'avez pas faim ?

It's noon, aren't you guys hungry?

A polite way to suggest a lunch break.

#4 Instagram caption for a food photo

J'ai trop faim en regardant cette pizza ! 🍕

I'm so hungry looking at this pizza!

Using 'trop' (too much) as an intensifier is very modern.

A common learner error Häufiger Fehler

✗ Je suis faim → ✓ J'ai faim.

I am hungry → I have hunger.

Never use 'être' with hunger in French.

Another common mistake Häufiger Fehler

✗ Tu es faim ? → ✓ Tu as faim ?

Are you hungry? → Do you have hunger?

Always use the verb 'avoir' when asking others.

#7 After a long hike

Après cette marche, nous avons une faim de loup !

After this walk, we are starving (hungry as a wolf)!

An idiom for extreme hunger.

#8 Complaining to a partner

Dépêche-toi, je meurs de faim !

Hurry up, I'm dying of hunger!

Hyperbole used frequently in casual French.

#9 In a formal meeting setting

Si personne n'a faim, nous pouvons continuer la réunion.

If no one is hungry, we can continue the meeting.

Used here to check the group's needs.

#10 Watching a cooking show

Cette émission me donne faim.

This show makes me hungry.

A variation meaning 'gives me hunger'.

Teste dich selbst

Complete the sentence.

Je ____ faim.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: ai

The correct conjugation of 'avoir' for 'Je' is 'ai'.

🎉 Ergebnis: /1

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Hunger Intensity Levels

Avoir un petit creux

Just a bit peckish, looking for a snack.

J'ai un petit creux, tu as un biscuit ?

Avoir faim

Standard hunger, ready for a meal.

J'ai faim, on mange ?

Mourir de faim

Dramatic/Extreme hunger.

Dépêche-toi, je meurs de faim !

J'ai la dalle

Very hungry (Casual Slang).

Wesh, j'ai trop la dalle !

When to say 'J'ai faim'

Avoir Faim
💼

At the office

Pause déj ? J'ai faim !

🍳

Cooking at home

Ça sent bon, j'ai faim !

🎮

Late night gaming

J'ai faim, Uber Eats ?

📜

Restaurant browsing

Regarde le menu, j'ai faim.

👶

With children

Maman, j'ai faim !

Avoir vs Être for Physical States

Avoir (Possession)
Faim Hunger
Soif Thirst
Chaud Heat
Être (Identity/Adjective)
Fatigué Tired
Malade Sick
Content Happy

Types of Hunger Idioms

🐺

Animal Idioms

  • Une faim de loup
  • Avoir un appétit d'oiseau
🦶

Body Idioms

  • L'estomac dans les talons
  • Avoir les crocs
📱

Modern Slang

  • Avoir la dalle
  • Avoir la nif

Aufgabensammlung

1 Aufgaben
Complete the sentence. Fill Blank A1

Je ____ faim.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: ai

The correct conjugation of 'avoir' for 'Je' is 'ai'.

🎉 Ergebnis: /1

Häufig gestellte Fragen

1 Fragen

Yes, it means 'I am starving'.

Verwandte Redewendungen

🔗

Avoir soif

similar

To be thirsty

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