Saying Hungry and Thirsty
5.6.1. The Main Idea
In French, hunger and thirst use the verb avoir, meaning to have.
J’ai faim. | I am hungry. |
J’ai soif. | I am thirsty. |
Literally, French says:
J’ai faim. | I have hunger. |
J’ai soif. | I have thirst. |
5.6.2. The Auxiliary Verb
The verb used here is avoir, not être.
avoir faim | to be hungry |
avoir soif | to be thirsty |
Do not translate directly from English.
Don’t say this. | |
J’ai faim. | Say this. I am hungry. |
Don’t say this. | |
J’ai soif. | Say this. I am thirsty. |
5.6.3. Simple Questions
Tu as faim ? | Are you hungry? |
Tu as soif ? | Are you thirsty? |
Vous avez faim ? | Are you hungry? formal or plural |
Vous avez soif ? | Are you thirsty? formal or plural |
5.6.4. Simple Answers
Oui, j’ai faim. | Yes, I am hungry. |
Oui, j’ai soif. | Yes, I am thirsty. |
Non, je n’ai pas faim. | No, I am not hungry. |
Non, je n’ai pas soif. | No, I am not thirsty. |
5.6.5. Short Dialogue
A : Tu as faim ? | A: Are you hungry? |
B : Oui, j’ai faim. Et toi ? | B: Yes, I am hungry. And you? |
A : Moi, j’ai soif. | A: I am thirsty. |
B : On va au café ? | B: Shall we go to the café? |
5.6.6. Checkpoint
By the end of this section, you should understand that French uses avoir for hunger and thirst: j’ai faim and j’ai soif, not je suis faim or je suis soif.