it means "This" and is used before a masculine word starting with a vowel or with an aspirated "h":
cet arbre, cet individu, cet objet, cet homme
but:
ce heros, ce heron
It depends on if the word is feminine or masculine. Masculine: cet Ex. that book - cet livre Feminine: cette Ex. that car- cette voiture
C'est, which is pronounced 'seh', is a French equivalent of 'This is'.
Ce, cet and cette are demonstrative adjectives and they are used when you talk about something specific (like "this" or "that"). "Ce" is used when you're talking about something masculine (this dog: ce chien). "Cette" is used when you're talking about something feminine (this woman: cette femme). "Cet" is used when you're talking about something masculine that starts with a vowel (this tree: cet arbre) or a mute h (this man: cet homme, but this owl: ce hibou).
Either: Cet est important? Cette est important? It depends whether "this" is masculine or feminine
Most likely, 'that'. In some cases, 'this'.
"Duh seh-teh-dyah(lah)" and "duhseh-teh-dyehn(lah)" will be the pronunciation of the French equivalents De cet indien(-lÃ?)... or De cette indienne(-lÃ?)... to the incomplete English phrase "That Indian's... ."Specifically, the preposition de means "of." The masculine demonstrative adjective cet and the feminine cette mean "this, that." The masculine adjective/noun indien and the feminine indienne mean "Indian, person from India." The adverb -lÃ? sometimes will be suffixed to the end of the adjective/noun to specify "that" over "this" (-ci).
The phrase "Cet oiseau est beau" translates to "This bird is beautiful" in English. "Cet" is a demonstrative pronoun meaning "this" used before masculine singular nouns, "oiseau" means "bird," and "beau" means "beautiful."
It depends on the context either which or what Quel homme es-tu vu ? : which man did you see? Quel est la nom de cet homme ? : what is the name of this man? Quel homme ! : what a man ! Quel is used when the object of the question is masculine singular, for feminine: quelle, plural: quels/quelles
It is "ce jardin." In French, "ce" is used before masculine singular nouns that begin with a consonant, while "cet" is used before masculine singular nouns that begin with a vowel sound. Since "jardin" starts with a consonant, the correct form is "ce jardin."
"Comment ca s'ecrit en francais?" (means "how do you write that in French")The adjective that (that object, this object) is ce or cet (before a vowel sound) or cette(feminine).There are a lot of words to translate "that" in french, depend the context: ce , cet, ces, cela, ça, lequel, où, que...
"Comment ca s'ecrit en francais?" (means "how do you write that in French")The adjective that (that object, this object) is ce or cet (before a vowel sound) or cette(feminine).There are a lot of words to translate "that" in french, depend the context: ce , cet, ces, cela, ça, lequel, où, que...
This is cet in French. ce, cette, cet, ceci, celui-ci