Significado
To wash oneself in a shower.
Contexto cultural
The 'French shower' stereotype is largely a myth in modern times. However, historically, the lack of hot water in old buildings meant people showered less frequently than in the US. Today, 76% of French people shower daily. In Quebec, the term 'douche' is used exactly like in France, but you might hear 'barbouillette' for the washcloth used during the shower, a word rarely used in France. In regions where running water is not always available, 'se doucher' often refers to a bucket shower. The verb remains the same, emphasizing the act of cleaning rather than the plumbing fixture. There is a strong movement called 'la douche courte' (the short shower) to save water. Many public pools now have timed showers that cut off after 30 seconds to encourage this.
The 'Me' Rule
Always remember that reflexive verbs are like a mirror. If you do it to yourself, you need the mirror pronoun (me, te, se).
Auxiliary Alert
In the past, never use 'avoir'. It's always 'Je me suis douché'. Using 'ai' is the most common beginner mistake.
Significado
To wash oneself in a shower.
The 'Me' Rule
Always remember that reflexive verbs are like a mirror. If you do it to yourself, you need the mirror pronoun (me, te, se).
Auxiliary Alert
In the past, never use 'avoir'. It's always 'Je me suis douché'. Using 'ai' is the most common beginner mistake.
Natural Flow
To sound more like a native, use 'Je vais prendre une douche' for planned actions and 'Je me douche' for routines.
Shower Songs
If you want to say you sing in the shower, say 'Je chante sous la douche'.
Teste-se
Fill in the correct reflexive pronoun and verb form in the present tense.
Chaque matin, je ___ (se doucher) à 7h.
The subject is 'je', so the reflexive pronoun must be 'me' and the verb ending for -er verbs is 'e'.
Choose the correct past tense form.
Hier soir, elles ___.
Reflexive verbs use 'être'. Since the subject 'elles' is feminine plural, the past participle 'douché' must agree and become 'douchées'.
Complete the dialogue with the appropriate phrase.
A: Tu viens au cinéma ? B: Attends, je suis allé au sport, je dois ___.
After 'dois' (must), we need the infinitive 'me doucher'. The pronoun 'me' matches the subject 'je'.
Which sentence fits a formal context?
You are at a luxury spa and want to know where the showers are.
This is the most polite and neutral-formal way to ask.
Use the subjunctive form.
Il faut que vous ___ avant d'entrer dans le sauna.
After 'il faut que', the subjunctive is required. The 'vous' form of 'se doucher' in the subjunctive is 'vous vous douchiez'.
🎉 Pontuação: /5
Recursos visuais
Shower vs. Bath
Banco de exercicios
5 exerciciosChaque matin, je ___ (se doucher) à 7h.
The subject is 'je', so the reflexive pronoun must be 'me' and the verb ending for -er verbs is 'e'.
Hier soir, elles ___.
Reflexive verbs use 'être'. Since the subject 'elles' is feminine plural, the past participle 'douché' must agree and become 'douchées'.
A: Tu viens au cinéma ? B: Attends, je suis allé au sport, je dois ___.
After 'dois' (must), we need the infinitive 'me doucher'. The pronoun 'me' matches the subject 'je'.
You are at a luxury spa and want to know where the showers are.
This is the most polite and neutral-formal way to ask.
Il faut que vous ___ avant d'entrer dans le sauna.
After 'il faut que', the subjunctive is required. The 'vous' form of 'se doucher' in the subjunctive is 'vous vous douchiez'.
🎉 Pontuação: /5
Perguntas frequentes
10 perguntasThey are both very common. 'Se doucher' is more concise and used in schedules, while 'prendre une douche' is very frequent in casual conversation.
You say 'Je me douche'. French doesn't have a separate present continuous like English 'I am showering'.
Yes, if the subject is feminine or plural (e.g., 'Elle s'est douchée'), although the pronunciation doesn't change.
No, 'se doucher' is only for showers. Use 'prendre un bain' for a bath.
A common slang term is 'se décrasser', which literally means to remove the grime.
You say 'Je dois me doucher' or 'J'ai besoin de me doucher'.
Both are correct, but 'à l'eau chaude' is more idiomatic.
Drop the 'se'. 'Je douche mon chien' (I am showering my dog).
No, the English insult 'douchebag' does not translate literally. In French, 'une douche' is just a shower.
You say 'Je me douche tous les deux jours'.
Frases relacionadas
se laver
similarto wash oneself
prendre un bain
contrastto take a bath
se rincer
specialized formto rinse oneself
faire sa toilette
similarto get ready/wash up
se décrasser
informalto scrub off the dirt
une douche froide
figurativea cold shower / a reality check