un phare
Un phare is a masculine noun. Its main meaning is a lighthouse, a tower with a strong light used to guide ships at sea. By extension, it can also mean a guiding light in a figurative sense, and in modern use it often refers to a car headlight.
Core meaning: lighthouse
The basic sense of un phare is a coastal structure that sends out a bright light to warn ships and show safe paths.
Examples
- Le phare éclaire la mer la nuit. “The lighthouse lights the sea at night.”
- Ils ont visité un vieux phare en Bretagne. “They visited an old lighthouse in Brittany.”
- Le bateau s’approche du phare. “The boat moves toward the lighthouse.”
- Le gardien du phare vit seul. “The lighthouse keeper lives alone.”
Extended meaning: guiding light
Un phare can also refer to a person or thing that guides others, often in a moral or intellectual sense.
Examples
- Ce professeur est un phare pour ses élèves. “This teacher is a guiding light for his students.”
- Elle reste un phare dans le monde de la science. “She remains a guiding light in the world of science.”
- Son travail est un phare pour les jeunes chercheurs. “His work is a guiding light for young researchers.”
Modern meaning: car headlight
In everyday French, un phare often means a car headlight. It is usually used in the plural.
Examples
- Allume les phares. “Turn on the headlights.”
- Les phares éclairent la route. “The headlights light the road.”
- Un des phares ne marche plus. “One of the headlights no longer works.”
- Il a oublié d’éteindre ses phares. “He forgot to turn off his headlights.”
Origin
The word comes from the famous lighthouse of Alexandria, known as the Pharos. This name comes from Greek Pharos, the island where the lighthouse stood. The term passed into Latin as pharus, then into French as phare.
Over time, the name of that one lighthouse became the general word for any lighthouse. Later, the idea of a strong guiding light led to figurative uses, and then to the modern use for vehicle lights.
Related forms and expressions
As an adjective-like noun
Phare can be used after another noun to mean “leading” or “key.”
Examples
- Un produit phare “A flagship product”
- Une ville phare “A leading city”
- Une idée phare “A key idea”
Common set phrases
- Être un phare pour quelqu’un “To be a guiding light for someone”
- Servir de phare “To serve as a beacon”
Synonyms and alternatives
For the lighthouse sense
- une balise
- un feu (in maritime use)
Examples:
- Le feu guide les navires. “The beacon guides the ships.”
For the figurative sense
- un guide
- un modèle
- une référence
Examples:
- Il est un modèle pour tous. “He is a model for all.”
For the car sense
- un feu avant
Examples:
- Les feux avant sont allumés. “The front lights are on.”
Summary
- un phare means a lighthouse in its basic sense
- it can also mean a guiding light in a figurative sense
- in modern use, it often means a car headlight
- it comes from the Greek name Pharos, via Latin
- it appears in phrases like produit phare to mean “key” or “leading”