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14,078 questions • 30,493 answers • 887,881 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,078 questions • 30,493 answers • 887,881 learners
sorry im totally lost where each one should be used, and ieven in questions verb is after it when in lesson says cant be. Is there a really simply dummys guide please, i
I debated on whether to choose "she takes dance lessons" or "she's dancing." Although "she's dancing" isn't correct, "she takes dance lessons" seems too precise. It seems to me you could dance regularly in a structured way without necessarily taking lessons. For example, if you are a dancer.
So although "she's dancing" is incorrect, "she dances" (in the sense that she's a dancer) seemed like it might be what you meant in English. "Elle fait de la danse" would work to mean "she takes dance lessons" but does it necessarily refer to lessons? Or can it refer to any regularly scheduled dancing?
Dear Kwiziq Team,
It has been more than 24 hours that I paid money to upgrade my account. I received the receipts from your side on email as well. But my account is still not upgraded. I have written multiple times to your email id and have not received any reply. Also I contacted on the phone no. provided but it was unavailable. I have left the message but no reply.. Please let me know how much time do you take to upgrade after receiving the payment. otherwise please refund my money.
How does personne work in a sentence written in past tense?
How would someone say “nobody believed me” for example? Is it “ne m’a cru personne” or should it be something different?
Le mot "magnigfique", est-ce que c'est une faut d'orthographe?
To all those who are confused about why 10 mins etc. is correct and 10 minutes is wrong, please ignore the given explanations as they make no sense whatsoever. They are both correct!
Why is "I've seen the neighborhood evolve" translated passé composé instead of imparfait? "I've seen" describes something that happens over time and is not ended, it's continuous and I'm not done seeing. Isn't that the case for imparfait?
Brief explanation on how to know when w verb is followed by à, de or pour
Qui peut m'aider s'il vous plaît 🙏🙏
Is the best way to understand this construction in the context of this lesson to think of the sentence in English as "If Joseph could come, it would be great"? An example of this reversed structure would be good in the lesson.
1) Les enfants reviennent des États-Unis et de France ('des 'because US is plural and 'de' as France is singular I assume)
2) Les enfants reviennent de vacances. (Here is 'de' used because it follows reveinnent or because vacances is singular in French?)
3) Elle se souvient des vacances en Espagne. (What is the justification for the use of 'des' in sentence 3? Why is it not 'de' as in 2) above?)
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