French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,734 questions • 29,429 answers • 837,357 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,734 questions • 29,429 answers • 837,357 learners
why is the verb after qui "vient" and "fait"? I don't get that, sorry.
And how would I know to use other verbs the same way?
Using the term non-verbal here is very confusing, as it seems like you are saying it should only be written and not spoken. Perhaps you could change it to read nominal sentences? A nominal sentence is one without an expressed verb. It would avoid the confusion.
In all other lessons your examples are given in the order of conjugation, which I find enormously helpful. In this one the order jumps all over the place. It's a very minor issue, but could you re-arrange the sentences? Thanks so much.
For a previous question, I got a lovely response about placing "aussi" after the verb, but I see that in the phrase "J'ai aussi demande "(needs an accent ague), "aussi" goes in the middle of the verb. Is that the rule?
Hello. Can anyone point me in the direction of a thesaurus? I cannot find one anywhere, even on Amazon.
I met this sentence: Tu y vas samedi? - J'y vais tous les samedis.
Could it also be: J'y vais le samedi?
Merci d'avance
Hello everyone,
I was wondering if this sentence must always be written in this Order:
François, dont j'ai rencontré la femme le mois dernier.
The lesson says that there are cases in which we find the possession separated by a verb, but there is no explanation about whether that is a rule that must always followed or is another way of expressing things.
Is it correct to write it like this?
François, dont la femme j'ai rencontré le mois dernier.
Thanks!
Regarding the question asked by Kyaw: perhaps the lesson "Nouns that are plural in English but singular in French, and vice versa" could have a few more examples added, including words such as 'vaisselle'. This is only a suggestion!
Can we use "vite" instead of rapide?
Find your French level for FREE
Test your French to the CEFR standard
Find your French level