Last updated: 2026年6月24日
Writing with Grading Adverbs: Stop Using 'Très' and 'Beaucoup'

Writing with Grading Adverbs: Stop Using 'Très' and 'Beaucoup'
Published: March 17, 2026 | Category: Tips & Tricks | Read Time: 10 Mins
If you take a look at a student's B1 level essay and compared it with a C1 level essay, the biggest difference isn't the grammar. It is the precision of vocabulary.
Intermediate learners use très (very) and beaucoup (a lot) for everything.
- "C'est très difficile."
- "Il y a beaucoup de pollution."
While grammatically correct, these words are descriptive blanks. For TEF/TCF Writing and Speaking, you need Grading Adverbs—words that describe the intensity or weight of an action with precision.
Here is the tier list of adverbs to boost your scores immediately.
1. Upgrading 'Très' (Intensity)
Instead of très, use adverbs that provide absolute weight or extremity to the adjective.
2. Upgrading 'Beaucoup' (Quantity & Impact)
When explaining impacts (e.g., environmental damage or economic gains in Section B letter Writing), replace beaucoup with adverbs ending in -ment.
3. Position and Nuance Adverbs
Sometimes, you need to soften a claim to sound more analytic (ideal for TCF Task 3 argumentative essays).
🚨 The Rules of Adverb Position
Students frequently place adverbs inside incorrect syntax blocks in compound tenses (Passé Composé).
- Short Adverbs go between Auxiliary and Participle:
The AI Diagnostic
The repetitive use of très is one of the easiest flags for automated scoring engines to spot.
On PrepMyFrench.com, our Lexical Analyser scans your texts for weak adverbs. If you have typed très more than twice in an essay, we highlight the word and give you a context-smart Dropdown list with 3 grading upgrades.