First, the best that French grammar can give: adverbs,
prepositions and conjunctions are invariable. Neither masculine nor feminine,
neither singular nor plural, neither contracted nor elided.
An adverb tends to describe the meaning of a word (often a verb, that's
the reason why it is called ad-verb). Adverbs are innumerable.
A preposition links up two words or word groups and subordinates the second to the first.
There are also prepositive locutions:
A conjunction links up either two elements of similar status:
A conjunction may also link up two elements in which one is a clause: verb+object:
There are also conjunctive locutions:
Avoir (to have), Faire
(to do), Pouvoir (to be able), Dire
(to say, to tell), Vouloir (to want).
These verbs are in the Top Ten and must be known by heart.
| Avoir | Faire | Pouvoir | Dire | Vouloir |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
In items 11 and 17, si
means oui.
To give an affirmative answer to a negative question (Is there not...? Are
you not...?Don't you...?) we say si
instead of oui.
à, après, avant, avec, chez, contre, dans, de, depuis, derrière, dès, devant, durant, en, entre, jusque, malgré, par, parmi, pendant, pour, près, sans, sauf, selon, sous, suivant, sur, vers
à cause de, à côté de, afin de, à force de, à partir de, à travers, au travers de, au-dedans de, au-dehors de, au-dessous de, au-dessus de, (+en dedans de, en dehors de, en dessous de, en dessus de), au lieu de, aux environs de, avant de, de la part de, de manière à, de peur de, en plus de, face à, faute de, grâce à, hors de, par-dessous, par-dessus, par-devant, vis-à-vis de ....
car, donc, et, mais, ni, or, ou
ainsi que, alors que, après que, aussitôt que, depuis que, dès que, maintenant que, parce que, tandis que, tant que ...
It's not as terrible as it looks:
you can't do without words such as "on", "without", "in" or "by", so you
learn them pretty quickly almost inadvertently.