A1 Proverb Neutral

Un malheur ne vient jamais seul

Misfortunes never come singly

Significado

Bad things often happen in a series.

🌍

Contexto cultural

The French often use this phrase with a shrug of the shoulders (the 'Gallic Shrug') to show acceptance of a bad situation. In Quebec, you might hear 'Un malheur n'arrive jamais seul' using the verb 'arriver' instead of 'venir'. This proverb is a favorite of 19th-century realist writers like Balzac to foreshadow a character's downfall.

🎯

Drop the 'Ne'

To sound like a native in a casual setting, say 'Un malheur vient jamais seul'.

⚠️

Don't be too negative

Using this too often can make you sound like a 'râleur' (a chronic complainer).

Significado

Bad things often happen in a series.

🎯

Drop the 'Ne'

To sound like a native in a casual setting, say 'Un malheur vient jamais seul'.

⚠️

Don't be too negative

Using this too often can make you sound like a 'râleur' (a chronic complainer).

Ponte a prueba

Complete the proverb with the missing word.

Un malheur ne vient ______ seul.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: jamais

The fixed proverb uses 'jamais' to emphasize that it *never* happens that a misfortune is alone.

Which situation best fits the proverb?

Situation: You win the lottery and get a promotion.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: False

The proverb is only for 'malheur' (misfortune), not for good news.

Choose the correct gender agreement.

Un malheur ne vient jamais ____.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: seul

'Malheur' is masculine singular, so 'seul' must match.

Complete the dialogue.

A: J'ai perdu mon portefeuille et ma clé est cassée. B: Oh là là, _________ !

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Un malheur ne vient jamais seul

This is the natural empathetic response to a streak of bad luck.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Ayudas visuales

When to use this phrase

🌧️

Bad Luck

  • Broken phone
  • Late bus
  • Rainy day

Banco de ejercicios

4 ejercicios
Complete the proverb with the missing word. Fill Blank A1

Un malheur ne vient ______ seul.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: jamais

The fixed proverb uses 'jamais' to emphasize that it *never* happens that a misfortune is alone.

Which situation best fits the proverb? situation_matching A1

Situation: You win the lottery and get a promotion.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: False

The proverb is only for 'malheur' (misfortune), not for good news.

Choose the correct gender agreement. Choose A2

Un malheur ne vient jamais ____.

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: seul

'Malheur' is masculine singular, so 'seul' must match.

Complete the dialogue. dialogue_completion A2

A: J'ai perdu mon portefeuille et ma clé est cassée. B: Oh là là, _________ !

✓ ¡Correcto! ✗ No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Un malheur ne vient jamais seul

This is the natural empathetic response to a streak of bad luck.

🎉 Puntuación: /4

Preguntas frecuentes

6 preguntas

In formal writing, yes. In spoken French, it is almost always dropped.

No, 'malheur' specifically means misfortune. For good things, you'd have to invent a phrase like 'Une bonne nouvelle n'arrive jamais seule'.

'Un malheur ne vient jamais seul' describes the current situation, while 'Jamais deux sans trois' predicts that a third bad thing will happen.

Yes, it is one of the most common proverbs in the French language.

It is masculine (un malheur).

Yes, with colleagues, but avoid using it with your boss during a serious meeting.

Frases relacionadas

🔄

La loi des séries

synonym

The law of series.

🔗

Jamais deux sans trois

similar

Never two without three.

🔗

C'est la scoumoune

slang

It's bad luck.

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