French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,228 questions • 30,843 answers • 907,325 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,228 questions • 30,843 answers • 907,325 learners
I'm confused about this. Aren't they the same thing?
Hi, I notice you can use "better" for feelings but what about for smell? How would you say, "It smells better"? Thank you!!!
How do I join a study group
"Note that the latter structure sounds very formal in French! In everyday language, you would usually use one of the alternatives listed below."
How would the structure look like for alternative form look like?
Pourquoi je l'ai trouvé difficilement a comprendre les paroles
In one of the writing exercises, I translated "I love my cousin Benjamin" to, "J'aime bien mon cousin Benjamin", but the system corrected this to "J'aime beaucoup mon cousin Benjamin". Why? It actually seems to me that "J'aime bien" is more appropriate than "J'aime beaucoup" (I like a lot).
In the grammar lesson, it explains that you can use either "en" or "de" in "un sac .... cuir". So to avoid confusion, would it not be better to show that both "en" and "de" are also both acceptable answers in "Je possède un blouson _____ cuir". Or are they?
A quick English correction, but in this sentence -
dans + [article] + [noun] is used to refer to a actual, physical place = in the/a/his ...It should say 'an actual' instead of 'a actual'
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