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13,680 questions • 29,317 answers • 833,428 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,680 questions • 29,317 answers • 833,428 learners
I don't understand why "Pour être riche, il faut avoir beaucoup d'argent" is wrong? Any ideas, please.
Please tell me the answer
Can we say par avion as well as en avion?
Normally I have used the preposition à before a city, as in je vais à Paris. You don't use au Paris. In this exercise, we have a city with a plural name, namely Les Sables d'Olonne. Apparently, one must use aux Sables d'Olonne in stead of à Les Sables d'Olonne. So, is this a general rule: à + name of a singular city and aux + name of a plural city name?
Would it be appropriate to use "génial" as a translation of "nice!"?
ce, cet,ces
cette,ces
is this correct?
The audio for the line sounds like >
"Cette maison est bien."
Am I correct in thinking that, in this case, "bien" is describing the house and is therefore an adjective?
If this is true, then "bien" can be an adjective as well as an adverb.
Please could you tell how to know when to use "bien" or "bon" as an adjective.
In other words, why did the question not read "Cette maison est bonne" ?
There should be a way to speed up or slow down the audio
In the sentence: ¨Je vais acheter des pommes de terre et des patates douces pour préparer deux types de purée.¨, I used ¨purées¨ to match the plural established by ¨types¨.
Is ¨purée¨ always a singular noun?
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