"Exceptions" and "Attention" Lesson sections not covered by Kwiziq testsI have a notebook and I have added these two lessons.
Un/une become de/d' in negative sentences in French (French Indefinite Articles)
Du/de la/de l'/des all become de/d' in negative sentences (French Partitive Articles)
I went through several rounds of Kwiziq tests and I only get tested on the basic rules, never on the "ATTENTION" or "EXCEPTION" subsections of these lessons.
I got a score of 100%, but it feels like The app should also offer me test on these other topics.
How can I get more tests for these exceptions?
Example of rules I have never been offered any tests
This rule does NOT apply to sentences using the verb être and other List of French "state verbs" - "verbes d'état", with which the indefinite article doesn't change:
OR
When you want to emphasise the meaning of ONE (un/une) - not just a/an - as in He doesn't have ONE car, but TWO, you will keep un/une in the negative sentence - here it doesn't mean no/any:
the sound quality of this exercise appears to be poor
In the sentence, "Je vais me laisser tenter par la deuxième option qui a l'air vraiment intéressante à faire.", the adjective, intéressante, is féminine. I would have thought that this adjective is modifying the word 'air', which is masculine, rather than obliqely referring to the feminine noun, 'option'. Could you explain?
The notes state that Martin aime Sarah can say ´Martin loves Sarah’ but my answer was marked wrong, saying it should have been ´Martin aime bien Sarah’
I have a question in these two sentences: 1. Tu ne me le donnes pas. 2. Tu ne la lui écris pas. What is the correct order of indirect pronoun and object pronoun? In the first sentence, it seems that the order is indirect(me) + object(le), but in the second one, it becomes object(la) + indirect(lui). Is there anything wrong here? Or both are correct, that this order doesn’t matter?
"Moins le quart" is hardly perceptible.
Does the placement of 'Du tout' affect the overall meaning of the sentence? Could it be placed in different places to give the sentence different meanings? Are there any rules of where (before or after what) we are allowed to place 'du tout' ? How does the placement of 'du tout' change when there are prepositions within the sentence ?
I look in the examples, and see 'du tout' placed after adjectives and nouns, does that negate other parts of the sentence?
Franchir vs croiser always confuses me. Please explain
I have a notebook and I have added these two lessons.
Un/une become de/d' in negative sentences in French (French Indefinite Articles)
Du/de la/de l'/des all become de/d' in negative sentences (French Partitive Articles)
I went through several rounds of Kwiziq tests and I only get tested on the basic rules, never on the "ATTENTION" or "EXCEPTION" subsections of these lessons.
I got a score of 100%, but it feels like The app should also offer me test on these other topics.
How can I get more tests for these exceptions?
Example of rules I have never been offered any tests
This rule does NOT apply to sentences using the verb être and other List of French "state verbs" - "verbes d'état", with which the indefinite article doesn't change:
OR
When you want to emphasise the meaning of ONE (un/une) - not just a/an - as in He doesn't have ONE car, but TWO, you will keep un/une in the negative sentence - here it doesn't mean no/any:
J'ajouterais « se rejoindra » en plus de « se retrouver » et « se réunir ». :-)
Pourquoi pas je me suis matée? C'est une femme qui parle.
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