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French Phrase

Les douches sont ouvertes maintenant ?

/le duʃ sɔ̃t‿uvɛʁt(ə) mɛ̃t(ə)nã/
Meaning"Are the showers open now?"
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Meaning

The speaker is asking whether the showers are currently available for use. It is a straightforward, everyday question you might hear at a gym, swimming pool, hostel, or any public facility with shower rooms.

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When to use

Use this phrase when you arrive at a place that normally has showers and you need to know if they are operating at that moment – for example, after a late night at a hostel, before a swim class, or when checking a gym’s opening hours.

Grammar Breakdown

Lesdouchessontouvertesmaintenant?

1

Article défini pluriel

« Les » is the plural definite article, used before a plural noun like « douches ».

2

Verbe être au présent

« sont » is the third‑person plural present of « être », agreeing with the subject « les douches ».

3

Participe passé employé comme adjectif

« ouvertes » is the past participle of « ouvrir », used here as an adjective and must agree in gender and number with « douches » (feminine plural).

4

Adverbe de temps

« maintenant » means ‘now’ and is placed at the end of the clause in informal spoken French.

5

Forme interrogative simple

The sentence is a statement with a rising intonation; a more formal version would use inversion (« Les douches sont‑elles ouvertes maintenant ? ») or « est‑ce que ».

🗨In Conversation

A

Les douches sont ouvertes maintenant ?

Are the showers open now?

Oui, elles ouvrent à 6 h du matin et ferment à 22 h.

Yes, they open at 6 a.m. and close at 10 p.m.

B

Common Mistakes

  • Les douches sont ouvert maintenant ?

    The adjective must agree with the feminine plural noun « douches », so it should be « ouvertes ».

  • Les douches sont maintenant ouvertes ?

    While grammatically possible, the adverb « maintenant » is usually placed at the end in informal speech; moving it before the adjective can sound overly formal.

  • Les douches est ouvertes maintenant ?

    The verb must agree with the plural subject; use « sont », not « est ».

Alternatives

  • Les douches sont‑elles ouvertes maintenant ?

    Are the showers open now?

  • Est‑ce que les douches sont ouvertes maintenant ?

    Are the showers open now?

  • Les douches sont déjà ouvertes ?

    Are the showers already open?

  • Les douches sont ouvertes aujourd’hui ?

    Are the showers open today?

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Cultural Tip

In spoken French, the simplest way to ask a yes‑no question is to keep the statement order and just raise your intonation, as in the example. For a more formal or written context, use « est‑ce que » or invert the subject and verb. Remember that adjectives that follow a plural noun must agree in gender and number – « ouvertes » (feminine plural) not « ouvert ».