The French Relative Pronoun « dont » Explained
📝 What does it mean?
The word « dont » is a relative pronoun.
👉 It replaces de + [something] and usually means “whose, of which, about which, from which” in English.
It connects two sentences into one.
📌 The Structure
Main sentence + noun + dont + verb/phrase
Example:
-
Voici le livre. Tu parles de ce livre.
➡️ Voici le livre dont tu parles. 📖
= Here is the book you are talking about.
🔑 Common Uses of dont
1. With verbs that require de
Some French verbs are always followed by de. With these, we replace de + noun by dont.
✅ Examples:
-
C’est l’ami dont je me souviens.
= He is the friend I remember. (se souvenir de) -
Voici le sujet dont nous avons parlé.
= Here is the topic we talked about. (parler de) -
C’est la femme dont il rêve. 💭
= That’s the woman he dreams of. (rêver de)
2. To express possession (whose)
✅ Examples:
-
J’ai rencontré un homme dont la fille est médecin. 👩⚕️
= I met a man whose daughter is a doctor. -
C’est l’écrivain dont les livres sont célèbres. 📚
= He is the writer whose books are famous.
3. With expressions of quantity
✅ Examples:
-
Il a trois frères, dont un vit à Paris.
= He has three brothers, one of whom lives in Paris. -
J’ai beaucoup d’amis, dont deux habitent en Espagne. 🇪🇸
= I have many friends, two of whom live in Spain.
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
❌ C’est le livre de que je parle.
✅ C’est le livre dont je parle.
👉 Never use de que, always replace it with dont.
🎯 Mini Quiz
Translate into French:
-
The man whose car is red is my neighbor. 🚗
-
Here is the problem we talked about.
-
She has two dogs, one of which is very small. 🐕
-
That’s the film I’m dreaming of. 🎬
✅ Answers:
-
L’homme dont la voiture est rouge est mon voisin.
-
Voici le problème dont nous avons parlé.
-
Elle a deux chiens, dont un est très petit.
-
C’est le film dont je rêve.
✨ Voilà ! You now know how to use the relative pronoun « dont » in French.
It’s super common and will make your sentences sound more natural and advanced 🚀.