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French Phrase

Ce doc présente tous les termes.

/sə dɔk pʁe.zɑ̃t tu le tɛʁm/
Meaning"This document presents all the terms."
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Meaning

This sentence states that the document in question contains or displays every term relevant to the topic. It emphasizes completeness, indicating that no term has been omitted.

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When to use

Use this phrase when you want to point out that a reference material, handout, or digital file includes the full set of terminology, such as in a classroom, a meeting, or an online tutorial.

Grammar Breakdown

Cedocprésentetouslestermes

1

Demonstrative adjective "Ce"

"Ce" is used before a masculine singular noun to mean "this/that".

2

Abbreviation "doc"

"doc" is an informal abbreviation for "document"; it behaves like a masculine noun.

3

Verb "présenter" (present tense)

"présente" is the third‑person singular present indicative of "présenter", meaning "to present/show".

4

Quantifier "tous les"

"tous les" means "all the" and must agree in gender and number with the noun that follows.

5

Noun "termes"

"termes" is a masculine plural noun meaning "terms" or "words".

🗨In Conversation

A

Ce doc présente tous les termes dont on a besoin pour le projet.

This document contains all the terms we need for the project.

Parfait, je vais le consulter avant de commencer.

Great, I’ll review it before starting.

B

Common Mistakes

  • Ce document présente tout les termes.

    The quantifier should be "tous les" (plural) not "tout les".

  • Ce doc présent tous les termes.

    The verb must agree with the singular subject: "présente" not "présent".

  • Ce doc présente tous le termes.

    Both article and noun must be plural: "les termes".

Alternatives

  • Ce document contient tous les termes.

    This document contains all the terms.

  • Ce fichier répertorie chaque terme.

    This file lists every term.

  • Tous les termes sont présentés dans ce doc.

    All the terms are presented in this document.

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Cultural Tip

In French professional or academic contexts, using the full word "document" can sound more formal than the abbreviation "doc". Choose "doc" in informal settings, such as among classmates or teammates, but switch to "document" for emails to supervisors or clients.