뜻
Used to ask for the location of something or someone.
문화적 배경
In France, it is considered rude to ask 'Où est...?' without first saying 'Bonjour'. This is known as the 'politeness tax'. Quebecers might use 'C'est où...?' more frequently in casual speech than mainland French people. In many Francophone African countries, social hierarchy matters. You might add a title like 'Monsieur le Directeur' when asking for a person. Swiss French is often noted for being more precise. You might hear 'Où se trouve' used more often in daily life.
The Map Pin
Think of the accent on 'ù' as a little map pin pointing to a location.
Plural Trap
Always check if you are looking for one thing or many things before you speak.
뜻
Used to ask for the location of something or someone.
The Map Pin
Think of the accent on 'ù' as a little map pin pointing to a location.
Plural Trap
Always check if you are looking for one thing or many things before you speak.
Add 'Pardon'
Starting with 'Pardon' or 'Excusez-moi' makes you 100% more likely to get a friendly answer.
The 'Bonjour' Rule
Never forget the 'Bonjour' before the 'Où est'. It's the key to French hearts.
셀프 테스트
Fill in the blank with the correct form of the phrase.
Excusez-moi, ___ {la|f} tour Eiffel ?
The Eiffel Tower is a singular noun, so we use 'Où est'.
Choose the grammatically correct sentence.
Which of these is correct for finding your keys?
'Les clés' is plural, so 'sont' is required. Also, 'Où' needs the accent.
Complete the dialogue.
Tourist: Bonjour ! ___ {le|m} Louvre ? Local: C'est juste là-bas !
The tourist is asking for the location of the museum.
Match the question to the situation.
You are at a hotel and can't find your room.
'Chambre' means room, which is what you are looking for.
🎉 점수: /4
시각 학습 자료
Common Things to Find with 'Où est...?'
Places
- • {la|f} gare
- • {le|m} musée
- • {la|f} banque
People
- • Marie
- • {le|m} professeur
- • {le|m} médecin
Objects
- • {le|m} téléphone
- • {la|f} clé
- • {le|m} sac
연습 문제 은행
4 연습 문제Excusez-moi, ___ {la|f} tour Eiffel ?
The Eiffel Tower is a singular noun, so we use 'Où est'.
Which of these is correct for finding your keys?
'Les clés' is plural, so 'sont' is required. Also, 'Où' needs the accent.
Tourist: Bonjour ! ___ {le|m} Louvre ? Local: C'est juste là-bas !
The tourist is asking for the location of the museum.
You are at a hotel and can't find your room.
'Chambre' means room, which is what you are looking for.
🎉 점수: /4
자주 묻는 질문
10 질문To distinguish it from 'ou' meaning 'or'. It's a visual marker for 'where'.
Yes, that is the formal way to say 'Where is he?' or 'Where is it?'.
It is very common in spoken French, but it's informal. Use 'Où est...' in writing.
You can say 'Où est {la|f} toilette ?' but 'Où sont les toilettes ?' is more common.
'Où se trouve' is slightly more formal and is used for permanent locations like buildings.
No, for time you must use 'Quand' (When).
No, the 't' is silent in 'Où est'. It sounds like 'Oo-eh'.
Try to guess, but 'Où est' remains the same regardless of gender; only the article (le/la) changes.
No, French does not allow the contraction 'Où'st'. You must say both words.
Both are correct. 'Où est' is shorter, 'Où est-ce que' is more common in speech.
관련 표현
Où sont...?
similarWhere are...?
Où se trouve...?
synonymWhere is [it] found?
C'est où ?
informalWhere is it?
D'où viens-tu ?
builds onWhere do you come from?
Par où ?
specialized formWhich way?