Identifying bien que not bien as an adjective
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Belinda D.Kwiziq community member
Identifying bien que not bien as an adjective
"Je l'aime bien qu'il soit un peu paresseux." - how can we identify here that the bien is part of bien que and not an adjective?
This question relates to:French lesson "Bien que/quoique + the subjunctive mood (Le Subjonctif) = although/though in French"
Asked 8 years ago
Bonjour Belinda,
It has to be "bien que" because otherwise the meaning is weird. If "bien" were an adverb here, it would break it down as
Je l'aime bien = I like him
qu'il soit un peu paresseux = a third person command: "may he be a bit lazy." Since that clearly makes no sense, we know that bien goes with the que.
Does that make sense?
It has to be "bien que" because otherwise the meaning is weird. If "bien" were an adverb here, it would break it down as
Je l'aime bien = I like him
qu'il soit un peu paresseux = a third person command: "may he be a bit lazy." Since that clearly makes no sense, we know that bien goes with the que.
Does that make sense?
Belinda D.Kwiziq community member
Hi Laura,
Yes I thought you'd say that, but thought I would check.
Cheers
Leon P.Kwiziq community member
For me, the problem of understanding the French sentence often lies in my reading the sentence too slowly. Take the sentence in question. If I read it slowly, I am liable to see "bien" by itself. However, reading it fast enough makes it (to me) clearly "bien qu'il", and the meaning is clear.
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