In the above sentence, why is the correct answer "moins d'énergie que" and not "moins d'énergie que de"? I added the "de" based on this rule: "When expressing there are more/fewer/as many-much [thing/s] than/as [other thing/s], you need to add de after que".
Notre génération doit utiliser ________ la précédente.
- « Back to Q&A Forum
- « Previous questionNext question »
Thalia C.Kwiziq Q&A regular contributor
Notre génération doit utiliser ________ la précédente.
This question relates to:French lesson "Plus de ... que/Moins de ... que/Autant de ... que = More ... than/Less ... than/As much/many ... as (Comparisons with Nouns in French)"
Asked 4 years ago
Hi T,
In this example, the 'de' is not needed as it means -
Notre génération doit utiliser moins d'énergie que (ne l'a fait) la géneration précédente.
But if you said -
Notre génération doit utiliser moins de gazole que d'essence.
Here the 'de' is required.
moins de ... que de ...
I hope this is clearer.
Maarten K. Kwiziq Q&A super contributor
This is a case of have/use 'less (things) than', rather than 'less of this than that' - each generation has to use less energy than the one preceding. Therefore it fits the moins de ... que, rather than moins de ... que de context.
Don't have an account yet? Join today
Ask a question
Find your French level for FREE
Test your French to the CEFR standard
Find your French level