French Grammar
Beginner → Intermediate
⏱ 5 min read
C'est and s'est are pronounced exactly the same in French — yet they have completely different meanings. In this guide, you'll learn the difference clearly, with simple rules, real examples, and a quiz to test yourself.
In this article
Part 1
What does c'est mean?
C'est is a contraction of ce + est. It translates to "it is", "this is", or "that is". Use it to point at something and describe it.
c'est
=
ce (this / that) + est (is)
C'est bon.→It's good.
C'est mon ami.→This is my friend.
C'est difficile.→That's difficult.
💡 Quick rule: If you can replace it with "it is" or "this is" in English → write c'est.
Part 2
What does s'est mean?
S'est is a contraction of se + est. It always belongs to a reflexive verb — an action that someone does to themselves.
s'est
=
se (himself / herself) + est (has)
Il s'est levé.→He got up.
Elle s'est blessée.→She hurt herself.
Il s'est trompé.→He made a mistake.
💡 Key point: There is always a person (he, she, I, they…) doing something, and the action comes back to that person.
Part 3
The cheat code to tell them apart
Test 1
Can you say "it is" or "this is" in English? → Write c'est
Test 2
Is there a person doing something to themselves (he, she, I, they…)? → Write s'est
Part 4
Quick comparison table
| C'est | S'est | |
|---|---|---|
| Meaning | It is / This is / That is | He/She did (to himself/herself) |
| Comes from | CE + EST | SE + EST |
| Used with | Descriptions, things, ideas | Reflexive verbs + a person |
| Example | C'est beau. | Il s'est réveillé. |
Part 5
Practice quiz — c'est or s'est?
Question 1
___ facile.
It's easy.
Question 2
Il ___ endormi.
He fell asleep.
Question 3
___ une bonne idée.
That's a good idea.
Want to go further?
Watch the full video lesson on YouTube — with more examples and a harder quiz!
▶ Watch on YouTube










