Home

Sois

Sois is the second-person singular form of the French verb être in the imperative mood. It is also the second-person singular form of être in the present subjunctive, used after que to form clauses expressing doubt, possibility, wish, or necessity (que tu sois).

In everyday use, sois is employed to give informal commands or advice to one person: for example,

As a present subjunctive form, sois appears in subordinate clauses after expressions that require the subjunctive,

Etymologically, sois derives from the verb être, which in turn traces back to Latin esse. In French,

Sois
prudent.
Ne
sois
pas
en
retard.
Its
formal
or
plural
counterparts
are
soyez
(you
all
or
you
formal)
and
soyons
(let
us
be).
The
imperative
forms
of
être
are
irregular
compared
with
many
other
French
verbs,
reflecting
the
verb’s
central
role
in
the
language.
such
as
Je
veux
que
tu
sois
heureux
(I
want
you
to
be
happy)
or
Il
faut
que
tu
sois
patient
(It
is
necessary
that
you
be
patient).
These
uses
are
distinct
from
the
imperative
sense,
even
though
the
surface
form
is
the
same.
the
imperative
forms
often
align
with
the
present
subjunctive
forms,
and
sois
embodies
that
historical
connection
as
the
2nd
person
singular
of
être
in
both
moods.