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14,223 questions • 30,838 answers • 907,023 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,223 questions • 30,838 answers • 907,023 learners
I hear the reader pronounce the "t" at the end of "fait". Is this correct?
First off, I love all of the dictées that you offer. This is such a wonderful resource! I was confused on one piece of this exercise, though. If "la position" is a feminine noun, why wouldn't its modifying adjectives appear in the feminine form "datée et signée"? This specially confused me since the exercise explicitly noted that "votre position" was the noun being referred back to. Merci!
Think I've grasped qui v que (the youtube video v helpful) but am struggling with when to drop the e or i before a vowel. Any advice please?
Just done a test when one answer was ce qu'est and this one below:
Julien doit partir, ________ est triste.Julien must leave, which is sad.quelce quiWhen does "fou" come before or after the noun? I was playing with Google Translate to hear in one sentence between "the crazy horse, the crazy cow, the crazy man." It came up "Le cheval fou, la vache folle, l'homme fou."
Were they under-cooked? Is this referring literally to nuts/walnuts as part of the meal - or is it a part of the scallop, or a reference to the scallop?
I found this article: "https://www.lawlessfrench.com/grammar/comparative-adverbs/", explaining how to use: "plus/moins/aussi que" and "plus/moins/autant de/que", and i did the 4-question kwiz at the of the lesson but I feel like I need more practice. Is there a way I could get more practice specific to these subjects?
Why does the sentence "quatre jolies filles" have the adjective before the noun?
(I know this question is not related to the topic of this article, but there doesn't seem to be an equivalent example in the relevant article.)
Does Ne ... pas + Passé composé + depuis longtemps =
Ne ... plus + Présent indicatif + depuis longtemps ? (Statements in either of these formats mean the same??) To help clarify, could you please provide translations for these statements a) to c) below (any other examples would be greatly appreciated) Thanks in advance.a)Tu ne fumes pas depuis longtemps.
b)Tu n'as pas fumé depuis longtemps
c) Tu ne fumes plus depuis longtemps
In paragraph 3 why does "j'avais" denote an obligation (to have to) instead of it being "je devais"?
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