Hello and good day all. The way to conjugate “All the tickets have been sold” as either « Tous les tickets sont vendus » or « Tous les tickets ont été vendus » confuses me. I understand the first but don’t understand the second. Thanks in advance.
Confused on the conjugation
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Confused on the conjugation
Bonjour Okpeta,
The quiz question was -
The sentence is in the passive voice and if you had said :
So this is just the passé composé of the verb 'être vendu' rather than the present although you could say both to convey the same meaning.
If it were in the futur it would be -
If you are rusty about the passive voice with compound tenses here is a reminder lesson -
Forming La Voix Passive with compound tenses in French (French Passive Voice)
Bonne Continuation !
Tickets is an anglisism, isn't it? shouldn't it be billet?
Tous les billets sont vendus = all the tickets are sold
Tous les billets ont été vendus = all the tickets have been sold
Okpeta J.
can you link the example or exercise this phrase and the 2 translations comes from ?
As Lisa notes, the 2 French phrases aren’t identical in meaning (in French) and context would help determine which French phrase was closer to the original English usage.
Lisa,
yes ‘ ticket ‘ is an anglicism, but is very commonly used in French nowadays, and has been for quite some time.
See below links for the nuances that have arisen in French between the use of ‘ billet ‘ and ‘ ticket ‘
The first to wordreference :
https://www.wordreference.com/fren/ticket
and the second to Larousse monolingual on line version, under ‘ difficultés ‘ :
https://www.larousse.fr/dictionnaires/francais/ticket/78010
DIFFICULTÉSEMPLOI
C'est aujourd'hui l'usage qui détermine l'emploi de billet ou de ticket. On dit : un billet de théâtre, de cinéma, de chemin de fer, d'avion, de loto, mais : un ticket de métro, d'autobus, de tiercé.
remarque
On distinguait naguère billet, terme générique pour « imprimé constituant la marque matérielle d'un droit » et ticket, petit billet imprimé, découpé dans du carton ou du papier fort. Cette distinction n'a plus cours.
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