French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,715 questions • 29,376 answers • 835,883 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,715 questions • 29,376 answers • 835,883 learners
Hi Kwiziq, I think there is a bug with one of the questions. The question 'How would you say "This witch smells very bad!" ?' keeps showing that I chose the same wrong answer, even though I am not choosing that response. This has happened like 5 times in a row and has reduced my lesson score!
The response it keeps showing as chosen -> Cette sorcière sent très mauvais.
The one I actually chose -> Cette sorcière sent très mal
Here is a link to the song on YouTube, which works for me
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=up_IUfCFHao
I came back to the lesson and it is wrong: The subject is 'tu', so it should be "Tu 'veux' de l'eau ?", not 'veut'. That is even the lesson's example.
Why the bot considered 'veut' right? Is that really a possible answer?
"On est censes marcher". I have never seen a lesson on this usage. Is censer a verb--I can't find it. Is there a lesson on this?
is this normal use in French or is the English translation here slightly incorrect?
Does ‘copine/copain’ suggest a less serious relationship than partenaire and does ‘êtres chers’ work for loved ones? Thanks
I find it difficult with the article 'de'. I have reviewed the grammar lessons here to brush up my concepts but when reading online articles I still flounder. e.g. In this article, why do we write la dangerosité du Covid-19, en cas d'opposition. Should it not be de Covid and de l'opposition? https://www.rfi.fr/fr/am%C3%A9riques/20210529-%C3%A9tats-unis-vaccination-des-plus-jeunes-la-difficult%C3%A9-de-convaincre-parents-et-adolescents. Thank you in advance for helping clarify.
how will i know where to use etre and where to use avoir?
What is the meaning of enchaînait as it applies in this particular sentence?:
Il enchaînait les conquêtes amoureuses en évitant à tout prix de s'engager.
It doesn't seem to fit the dictionary meaning.
so I was doing a quiz on Kwiziq and the question was "C'est amusant." means: to which I answered "it is funny". It gave me an 'almost there' mark and I don't get why. It says the right one is 'This is funny'.
Find your French level for FREE
Test your French to the CEFR standard
Find your French level