French Comparative
The comparative is a grammatical construction that compares items in one of three ways:
- more ... than
- less ... than
- as ... as
French comparatives vary depending on whether you're comparing adverbs, adjectives, verbs, or nouns.
1) Comparative of adverbs
English | French |
more <adverb> than <adverb>-er than | plus <adverbe> que |
less <adverb> than | moins <adverbe> que |
as <adverb> as | aussi <adverbe> que |
For example
Il parle plus vite que moi. - He speaks more quickly than I do.
Sandra s'habille moins élégamment que lui. - Sandra dresses less elegantly than he does.
Je chante aussi bien que ma tante. - I sing as well as my aunt.
Note: After a comparative, French requires the stress pronoun (rather than a subject pronoun).
2) Comparative of adjectives
English | French |
more <adjective> than |
plus <adjectif> que |
less <adjective> than | moins <adjectif> que |
as <adjective> as | aussi <adjectif> que |
For example
Mon frère est plus grand que moi. - My brother is taller than I am.
Le chat a des moustaches moins courtes que le lapin. - The cat has less short whiskers than the rabbit.
Elle semble aussi inquiète que toi. - She seems as worried as you are.
Note: The adjective has to agree in gender and number with the noun it refers to.
3) Comparative of verbs
English | French |
<verb> more than |
<verbe> plus que |
<verb> less than | <verbe> moins que |
<verb> as much as | <verbe> autant que |
For example
Je pleure plus que ma copine. - I cry more than my girlfriend.
Tu parles moins que je ne le pensais. - You speak less than I thought.
Marie danse autant que Sarah. - Marie dances as much as Sarah.
4) Comparative of nouns
English | French |
more <thing/s> than |
plus de <chose/s> que |
less <thing/s> than | moins de <chose/s> que |
as much/many <thing/s> as | autant de <chose/s> que |
For example
J'ai plus de jouets que toi. - I have more toys than you.
Thomas a moins de courage qu'Henri. - Thomas has less courage than Henri.
Vos amis reçoivent autant de cadeaux que vous. - Your friends are getting as many presents as you.
Irregular comparatives
Some adjectives and adverbs have irregular comparative forms to express "more than," though they remain regular when expressing "less than" or "as ... as."
basic form | comparative form | English |
bien | mieux que | well -> better than |
bon/ne | meilleur/e que | good -> better than |
mauvais/e | pire que |
bad -> worse than |
Remember that bon and meilleur are adjectives, and so need to agree with the nouns they modify.
Note that in English, we say "better than" for both the adverb "well" and the adjective "good," whereas French has two distinct forms:
- bien --> mieux que
- bon --> meilleur/e que
To express "worse than" in French, you can use either the regular plus mauvais/e que or the irregular pire que.
For example
Aurélie est meilleure en maths que Julien. - Aurélie is better at maths than Julien.
Il chante mieux que moi. - He sings better than me.
Elle chante moins bien que moi. - She sings less well than I do.
Lucie est aussi bonne en maths que Julien. - Lucie is as good at maths as Julien.
Ce restaurant est plus mauvais que / pire que l'autre. - This restaurant is worse than the other.
Related lesson: Superlatives