A1 Expression Formal

Comment vous appelez-vous ?

What are you called? (formal)

Significado

A polite way to ask someone's name.

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Contexto cultural

The 'vous' vs 'tu' distinction is a pillar of French social life. Using 'vous' with a stranger is not just grammar; it's a sign of being 'bien élevé' (well-bred/polite). Quebecers are generally quicker to move to 'tu' than people in France, but 'Comment vous appelez-vous ?' remains the standard for initial formal contact. In Francophone Africa, respect for elders is paramount. 'Comment vous appelez-vous ?' is used strictly with anyone older or in a position of authority. Belgian French follows similar formal rules to France, though the tone can sometimes be slightly more relaxed in administrative settings.

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The Liaison is Key

Always pronounce the 'z' sound between 'vous' and 'appelez'. It makes you sound much more fluent.

⚠️

Don't forget the hyphen

When writing, the hyphen in 'appelez-vous' is mandatory in formal French.

Significado

A polite way to ask someone's name.

🎯

The Liaison is Key

Always pronounce the 'z' sound between 'vous' and 'appelez'. It makes you sound much more fluent.

⚠️

Don't forget the hyphen

When writing, the hyphen in 'appelez-vous' is mandatory in formal French.

💬

Wait for the 'Tu'

Never switch to 'Comment tu t'appelles ?' until the other person suggests 'On peut se tutoyer ?' (Can we use tu?).

Teste-se

Complete the formal question.

Comment ______ appelez-vous ?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: vous

The reflexive pronoun for 'vous' is also 'vous'.

Which of these is the most formal way to ask a name?

Choose the correct option:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Comment vous appelez-vous ?

The inversion (verb-subject) is the hallmark of formal French.

Match the phrase to the correct register.

Match them up:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: a

Understanding register is crucial for French social interaction.

Fill in the missing line in this hotel check-in.

Receptionist: Bonjour monsieur. ______ ? Guest: Je m'appelle Jean Dupont.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Comment vous appelez-vous

A hotel receptionist would always use the formal 'vous' form.

🎉 Pontuação: /4

Recursos visuais

The Components of the Phrase

Question Word

  • Comment (How)
🔄

Reflexive Pronoun

  • vous (yourself)
🗣️

Verb

  • appelez (call)
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Subject

  • vous (you)

Banco de exercicios

4 exercicios
Complete the formal question. Fill Blank A1

Comment ______ appelez-vous ?

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: vous

The reflexive pronoun for 'vous' is also 'vous'.

Which of these is the most formal way to ask a name? Choose A1

Choose the correct option:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Comment vous appelez-vous ?

The inversion (verb-subject) is the hallmark of formal French.

Match the phrase to the correct register. Match A2

Combine cada item a esquerda com seu par a direita:

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: a

Understanding register is crucial for French social interaction.

Fill in the missing line in this hotel check-in. dialogue_completion A1

Receptionist: Bonjour monsieur. ______ ? Guest: Je m'appelle Jean Dupont.

✓ Correto! ✗ Quase. Resposta certa: Comment vous appelez-vous

A hotel receptionist would always use the formal 'vous' form.

🎉 Pontuação: /4

Perguntas frequentes

10 perguntas

The first 'vous' is the reflexive pronoun (yourself) and the second is the subject (you). It literally means 'How do you call yourself?'

It's a bit blunt. It's better to say 'Quel est votre nom ?' or the full 'Comment vous appelez-vous ?'

No, it sounds too formal. Use 'Comment tu t'appelles ?' for children.

'Comment vous appelez-vous' is the standard way to ask. 'Quel est votre nom' is more common on forms or when a clerk needs to type your name into a computer.

Respond with 'Je m'appelle [Your Name].'

Adding 'Monsieur' or 'Madame' at the end makes it even more polite: 'Comment vous appelez-vous, monsieur ?'

Only if the next word starts with a vowel, but since 'vous' starts with a consonant, the 't' is silent here.

In casual texting, people might forget it, but in any formal writing, it's a grammatical error.

No, it's very common in spoken French, but slightly less formal than the inverted version.

Usually, in an email, you would already know the person's name. If not, you'd use 'À l'attention de...' or 'Madame, Monsieur...'

Frases relacionadas

🔗

Je m'appelle...

builds on

My name is...

🔗

Enchanté

similar

Nice to meet you

🔄

Quel est votre nom ?

synonym

What is your name?

🔗

Comment allez-vous ?

similar

How are you?

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