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Sont

Sont is the third-person plural present tense form of the French verb être, meaning “to be.” It is used with the subject pronouns ils or elles to describe a state, identity, or location, as in ils sont médecins (they are doctors) or elles sont en retard (they are late). As a form of être, sont is encountered in a wide range of constructions, including statements of characteristic, origin, profession, and condition.

Etymology and grammar: être is an irregular verb with a long history in the Romance languages. The

Usage notes: In negation, sont appears within the standard ne... pas construction (Ils ne sont pas heureux).

Common confusions: sont is often mistaken for son, which is a possessive determiner meaning “his,” “her,” or

See also: être; French verb conjugation; French pronouns.

form
sont
derives
from
the
Latin
sunt,
the
third-person
plural
present
of
esse,
and
has
persisted
in
modern
French
as
the
standard
plural
present
tense
ending
form.
Other
present-tense
forms
of
être
include
suis,
es,
est,
sommes,
êtes,
forming
a
highly
distinctive
paradigm
that
is
central
to
French
grammar.
Like
other
finite
verbs,
sont
agrees
with
its
subject
in
number
(plural)
and
person.
In
questions,
a
subject-verb
inversion
can
occur
(Sont-ils
prêts
?).
The
form
is
frequently
used
with
adjectives,
nouns,
prepositional
phrases,
and
subordinate
clauses
to
convey
existence,
state,
or
attribution.
It
is
also
a
common
element
in
everyday
speech,
literature,
journalism,
and
formal
writing.
“its”
and
is
placed
before
a
noun
(son
livre).
The
two
words
are
homophones
in
many
dialects
but
have
distinct
grammatical
roles.