The text says "Note that in each case where être is the auxilliary, the verb passer is followed by a preposition (en, sur, dans, à etc.). "
But then we have the example "Elle est passée chez Laurent hier"
Surely "chez laurent" is a noun?
The text says "Note that in each case where être is the auxilliary, the verb passer is followed by a preposition (en, sur, dans, à etc.). "
But then we have the example "Elle est passée chez Laurent hier"
Surely "chez laurent" is a noun?
SR ,
‘ chez ‘ is a preposition, not an article/determiner. It can be used in multiple contexts.
The structure in this example is the same as for the examples in the lesson using ‘ par ‘, for instance.
When there is a preposition directly following the verb passer, preceding the noun, there is no direct object, and the grammatical rule is that conjugation is with ‘ être ‘, as per the lesson ( this is in common with most, but not all, verbs that can conjugate with either ‘ être ‘ or ‘ avoir ‘ ).
Chez = at someone's place (French Prepositions)
https://www.wordreference.com/fren/passer
https://www.wordreference.com/fren/chez
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