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Dec 19, 2018 · C'est” and “il est” in French are a common example of two phrases that might seem similar, but are in fact used in quite different contexts.
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1. when describing something specific/known, use ' il/elle est adjective (with subject gender agreement) . eg 'Cette robe, elle est chère' or 'Ce pull, il est ...
Astellas Established Markets-Commercial (EST-C) a regional business of Tokyo-based Astellas Pharma Inc. The EST-C region headquarters are based in the UK, ...
A contraction of ce (“it, this”) and est (“is”), the third-person singular indicative present form of être (“to be”).
The French expressions c'est and il est are synonymous but not interchangeable. Which one to use depends less on meaning than it does on grammar.
C'est and il/elle est are two common expressions used to describe people or things in French. Though they have the same meaning (he/she/it is), ...
the more that changes, the more it's the same thing : the more things change, the more they stay the same —often shortened to plus ça change.
Il est is often used with an adjective to describe some specific attribute of the subject. It is common to first use c'est to introduce someone or something, ...