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v0.1.1263
NotesFrench B HLTopic 3.1Reflexive verbs
Back to French B HL Topics
3.1.43 min read

Reflexive verbs

IB French B • Unit 3

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Contents

  • What it is
  • The forms
  • When to use it
  • In action
  • Common errors
The action comes back to the subject: A reflexive verb (un verbe pronominal) is a verb where the subject does the action to itself. In French you can spot it by the extra little pronoun: se laver (to wash oneself), se lever (to get oneself up), s'appeler (to call oneself = to be named). That pronoun — me, te, se, nous, vous, se — is the reflexive pronoun, and it must match the subject and sit just before the verb: «je me lave», «tu te laves», «il se lave». Once you see it as “I wash myself”, the structure makes sense.
un verbe pronominal
a reflexive verb — its infinitive carries «se» (se laver, se lever)
le pronom réfléchi
the reflexive pronoun — me, te, se, nous, vous, se
le sujet
the subject — the one who does AND receives the action
se laver
to wash oneself — «je me lave» (I wash myself)
se lever
to get up — «je me lève» (note the è in the je/tu/il/ils forms)
s'appeler
to be called — «je m'appelle…» (literally: I call myself…)
Add “myself / yourself” in your head: Whenever an infinitive starts with se (or s' before a vowel), mentally add “…oneself”: se coucher → “to put oneself to bed”. That reminds you a reflexive pronoun is needed, that it must agree with the subject, and that it goes right before the verb. This single habit prevents the most common reflexive mistakes.
Pronoun + verb, both agreeing with the subject: To conjugate a reflexive verb, do two things. First pick the reflexive pronoun that matches the subject: me / te / se / nous / vous / se. Then conjugate the verb as normal. The pronoun goes before the verb, and it shortens to m' / t' / s' before a vowel or a silent h: «je m'appelle», «il s'habille». Here is se laver (a regular -er reflexive) in full.
SujetPronom réfléchiVerbe (se laver)English
jememe laveI wash myself
tutete lavesyou wash yourself
il / elle / onsese lavehe/she washes himself/herself
nousnousnous lavonswe wash ourselves
vousvousvous lavezyou wash yourselves
ils / ellessese laventthey wash themselves
Infinitif« je » formNoteEnglish
se laverje me laveregular -erto wash (oneself)
se leverje me lèveè in je/tu/il/ils (lève, lèves…)to get up
s'appelerje m'appelledouble l + m' before a vowelto be called
s'habillerje m'habilles' before silent hto get dressed
se coucherje me coucheregular -erto go to bed
Match the pronoun to the subject, every time: The reflexive pronoun is never random — it always tracks the subject: je→me, tu→te, il/elle/on→se, nous→nous, vous→vous, ils/elles→se. Forgetting it (saying «je lave» for «I get washed») or using the wrong one (saying «je se lave») are the two biggest slips. Before a vowel, me/te/se become m'/t'/s'.

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Daily routine — and where the pronoun goes: Reflexive verbs are the everyday verbs of the daily routine (la routine quotidienne): waking, washing, dressing, hurrying, resting, going to bed. You will need them constantly to describe your day. The rule of placement: the reflexive pronoun sits right before the conjugated verb — and in the negative it wraps with ne…pas AROUND both the pronoun and the verb: «Je ne me lève pas tôt».

Les verbes de la routine quotidienne

  • se réveiller (to wake up) — « Je me réveille à sept heures. » (I wake up at seven.)
  • se lever (to get up) — « Tu te lèves tard le dimanche. » (You get up late on Sundays.)
  • se laver / se doucher (to wash / to shower) — « Il se douche le matin. » (He showers in the morning.)
  • s'habiller (to get dressed) — « Nous nous habillons vite. » (We get dressed quickly.)
  • se dépêcher (to hurry up) — « Dépêche-toi ! » (Hurry up!)
  • se reposer / se coucher (to rest / to go to bed) — « Elles se couchent tôt. » (They go to bed early.)
Negative wraps around pronoun + verb: To make a reflexive verb negative, put ne before the pronoun and pas after the verb: «Je ne me couche pas tard.» (I don't go to bed late.) A common slip is «Je me ne couche pas» — wrong: the ne comes first, then the reflexive pronoun, then the verb, then pas.
A daily routine, sentence by sentence: Here is a short paragraph about a daily routine, built one sentence at a time. Almost every verb is reflexive: pronoun matching the subject + verb. Read it once for meaning, then tap Voir la traduction for the English or 🔊 to hear it.

Les verbes pronominaux en action

Une routine, phrase à phrase

  1. Le matin, je me réveille à sept heures et je me lève tout de suite.
  2. D'abord, je me lave et je me brosse les dents dans la salle de bains.
  3. Ensuite, mon frère et moi, nous nous habillons et nous nous dépêchons.
  4. Mes parents, eux, se reposent un peu avant de partir au travail.
  5. Le soir, je me couche tôt parce que je me sens fatigué après les cours.
Steal this to describe your own day: Notice the recipe: subject + reflexive pronoun (me/te/se/nous/vous/se) + verb, often joined by d'abord, ensuite, le matin, le soir to sequence the day. Swap in your own times and verbs — se réveiller, se laver, s'habiller, se coucher — and you have a ready-made paragraph about your daily routine.

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The slips anglophones make: Three mistakes dominate. (1) Dropping the pronoun — saying «je lève» («I get up») because English has no “myself”. (2) Wrong pronoun — «je se lave» instead of «je me lave» (the pronoun must match the subject). (3) No elision — «je me appelle» instead of «je m'appelle» before a vowel. Compare the right version with the typical mistake.

Correct

  • Je me lève à six heures.
  • Je m'appelle Léa.
  • Nous nous reposons le week-end.

Erreur fréquente

  • Je lève à six heures.
  • Je me appelle Léa.
  • Nous se reposons le week-end.
Pronoun first, match the subject, elide before vowels: Before writing a reflexive verb, say it as “I do it to myself”: keep the pronoun, make it match the subject (je→me, tu→te, il→se, nous→nous, vous→vous, ils→se), and elide to m'/t'/s' before a vowel or silent h. In the negative, wrap ne…pas around the pronoun + verb («je ne me lève pas»).

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Complète avec le pronom réfléchi et la forme correcte : « Tu ___ ___ (se dépêcher) le matin, mais mes parents ___ ___ (se reposer) le dimanche. » [2 marks]

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