Thanks Chris. That's a little more confusing than I expected because it says in the lesson that aucun/aucune are always singular.
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Paul B.Kwiziq Q&A regular contributor
Thanks Chris. That's a little more confusing than I expected because it says in the lesson that aucun/aucune are always singular.
I know this should be an answer to your question Chris but there is a bug in Kwiziq that sometimes doesn't all submitting new questions or answers.
This question relates to:French lesson "Ne ... aucun(e) = None (French Negations)"
Asked 6 years ago
Chris W. Kwiziq Q&A super contributor
Aucun/e is almost always in singular. There aren't that many words which exist only in plural, so this really is a rare exception. So don't waste any time nor worry on this.
-- Chris (not a native speaker).
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