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14,250 questions • 30,885 answers • 909,442 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,250 questions • 30,885 answers • 909,442 learners
Also, how do I get to take the quiz again after looking over the material again?
Pourquoi c'est "ces deux pates sont mises delicatement ". Ils ont mise (avec accent?) Can you explain the reasonining behind ces deux pates sont ensuits mises delicatement. Thanks for your feedback.
I cannot differenciate between pronoun etre a and le mien la mienne ...
What is the difference in their function (use)
C'est vraiment une sujet utile et m'a aidé à déveloper mon écoute, merci à vous. Mais j'ai une question, est-ce que je peux télécharger le podcast? Si oui, comment je peux le faire?
Can one say, "Daniel habite à l'extérieur de la ville" to say "Daniel lives outside of the city", or is it wrong or odd? Also, when I was in school, we were told to use "au-dehors de" but you do not include it in the prepositions lesson. Do people use this preposition? It is in the Collins dictionary.
Why does one use allons gagner instead of gagnerons (future tense)? What determines which is better?
Isn’t the pronunciation rather è than é, since ai says è, such as in j’ai and j’aime.
Chers amis,
I am not native English-speaking person, but while I was reading this lesson, I made the relations of different types of “leave” in French with my native language which is Greek. In Greek we have different words, as in French, for expressing “leave”, probably there is the same in English with specialized word of meaning “leave”. Some words in English that are synonyms to leave could be for example, depart, go, abscond, exit, vamoose, go away, run off etc. So, maybe, for a native English person could be better explaining the different notions of French “leave” with the right word in English. Is that right? What do you think?
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