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13,883 questions • 29,939 answers • 858,265 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,883 questions • 29,939 answers • 858,265 learners
Quelle est la différence entre "d'abord," "au début," et "pour commencer ?" Il y a des nuances d'utilisation ?
Is it not also valid to ask, “Ça te dire…?” In place of “Est-ce que tu veux..?”
Hello,
How do you determine when "prochain/e" goes before vs after the noun? I remember reading in one lesson that it goes after the noun (for example, "le weekend prochain" or "l'hiver prochain") but in this exercise it goes before the noun "les prochaines vacances."
Please how do I access the lesson links listed, because each time I tap on it, it Alway bring's out system error.
Tu ________ tard hier soir, Marc.You came back late yesterday evening, Marc.(HINT: Conjugate "rentrer" (to come back) in the compound past (Passé Composé))
Why are we not using revenir which means to come back instead of rentrer which means to re-enter?
Is there a complete list of words like: des bals([dancing] balls),
des carnavals,
des festivals,
des récitals,..?
I can't find it on your site.
Thanks in advance, Jaap.
In the test, I got the following question
"Elle a mangé tout le gâteau !" means:
- She is eating all the cake!
- She ate all the cake!
- She is going to eat all the cake!
- She has eaten all the cake!
- She had eaten eat all the cake!
Could you please explain why we you believe 'she has eaten all the cake' is correct but not 'she had eaten all the cake'? How would we say she had eaten all the cake in French and why is this not passé composé?
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