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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,784 questions • 29,626 answers • 845,901 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,784 questions • 29,626 answers • 845,901 learners
During the exercise, per the bot, "tomates-cerises" is correct. However, the finished text has "tomates cerises" with no hyphen. Which is correct?
"Là, une multitude d'étals de poissons fraîchement pêchés aiguisaient l'appétit des passants"
I don't understand the plural here: Isn't it "Une multitude d'étals" - multitude being singular - which is the subject of the verb - rather than "D'étals" themselves, which would be plural.
I'm trying to devine whether there is some rule at work here here, or whether it's pretty much optional.
Why can't we say "N'importe que se passe" to say "Whatever happens"
I was surprised to see my use of "cet après-midi" corrected to "cette après-midi". So I looked it up and found that both genders are used for that phrase.
I selected nationality with Capital letter, but it says I selected lower case
Hello,
I was wondering, for this question:
Il y a un ________ arbre près de la vieille fenêtre.why the answer is vieil and not vieux, like from the list on adjectives that go before nouns?
Martin likes Sarah. -> Martin aime bien Sarah. I answered this question with simply "Martin aime Sarah", and I wonder why was it marked as a mistake. Nothing in the question suggested that it's the friendly sort of like, it could very well be a romantic sort of like. Both options seem grammatically correct to me. Isn't that right?
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