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13,739 questions • 29,450 answers • 837,941 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,739 questions • 29,450 answers • 837,941 learners
What does one base on to add "du" "de la" "de l' "? ........
Hey! Why in the examples is it "j'ai de chance" and not "J'ai de la chance"?
How can I use ni...ni to make this sentence negative: 'L'eleve a compris et a appris'?
Does it become 'l'eleve n'a ni compris ni appris'?
Thanks for any help
Au début, j'entends "Tous les quatre ans" au lieu de "Tous les ans".
At 1:04 in the video, it shows "tu parle à Marie". Isn't "parler" conjugated "tu parles" in 2nd person singular?
In the sentence "peu importe qu'il vienne ou pas"
Where is the "le" to go with the "que?"
In the sentence: Anne et Alain apprendront la cuisine le mois prochain, I’m confused why it’s la cuisine and not à cuisiner since the translation was: will learn how to cook. Can someone explain this? Thanks.
The lesson notes an exception for naître (correctly) and for apparaître. It does not clearly state the exception for apparaître - although I note in discussion it has been mentioned it is because it also conjugates with être in passé composé. As I understand it, and checking other verb conjugation sites, this is correct but not what is shown on the verb conjugation site of Lawless French https://www.lawlessfrench.com/verb-conjugations/apparaitre/
I am a bit confused with the following sentence. The correct thing is to put ce que but instead, in the lesson, we know that ce qui should be used when the next word is a verb or an object or a reflexive pronoun?? Is it because, the "tu" is in front of the m' that doesn't count? Because I assumed that since there is a reflexive verb I should put ce qui.
Je me demande ce que tu m'as acheté pour Noël.Thanks,
Anna
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