French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
9 questions • 30,758 answers • 902,771 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
9 questions • 30,758 answers • 902,771 learners
So one can say: Il fait que tu aies de la patience and Il fait que tu sois patient - yes? Both are grammatically correct in English? You must have patience / You must be patient. One being a noun the other an adverb.
Just wondering when to use il faut que + subjunctive verb as opposed to the former lesson where il faut was used without que + subjunctive verb? It seems to translate roughly the same?
Hi, to say “I must” is there a difference between when one would use ‘Il faut que je …” instead of “je dois”? Or are they equivalent? (I believe devoir is simply followed by an infinitive rather than by the subjunctive with falloir, so it’s simpler to use!) Thanks.
Is it correct to say 'Il fallait qu'il annule son vacance' or should the 'annule' also be in the past tense? Merci.
The answer to the following question was question was fasses.
Il faut que ________ l'exercice.You must do the exercise.HINT: ¨tu¨ form
I answered "tu fasses de," and it was incorrect.Why is "faire de l'excecice" incorrect?
can't ı say that "Il faut qu’elle soit partie avant midi."= she must have finished your homework...
title of the lesson is "Il faut que is always followed by Le Subjonctif Présent"
I think it must be uncorrect
Find your French level for FREE
Test your French to the CEFR standard
Find your French level