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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,734 questions • 29,429 answers • 837,346 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,734 questions • 29,429 answers • 837,346 learners
Is "Nous nous sentons", in this situation, just a matter of emphasizing the point?
I enjoyed this. It was very good.
By the way, some of your hints appear in the wrong part of the dictation.
Thanks again.
Kate
cud u tell that is it "comment est-il le roman?" or is it "comment le roman est-il?"
"Il devrait encore être sous garantie." "Il devrait toujours être sous garantie." This exercise uses "encore" exclusively here, but I was wondering if this was an example of a case where "encore" and "toujours" could be used interchangeably to mean "still"? It is a hard concept to grasp because of the other meanings of these 2 words, and one I just can't seem to get right. For example, could "Il devrait encore être sous garantie" have 2 possible meanings depending on context i.e. "It should (still or again) be under warranty", and could "Il devrait toujours être sous garantie" also have 2 possible meanings i.e. "It should (still or always) be under warranty" ?
In a quiz:
Q: Qui est cet homme?
A: C’est Marc Dupré.
Why C'est and not Il est?
The first rule in the lesson for C’est is that you use it if it/he/she is followed by un/une/le/la or another article. That is not the case here.
The second rule is to use C'est to express general, unspecific statements and opinions, referring to a thing generally, as in something unspecified is great or delicious, like "Science is fun!". But here, the answer is identifying a specific person, Marc Dupré, not a general concept.
Thanks.
Which is correct - un lave-vaisselle or une machine à laver la vaisselle?
Chanson douce = lullaby :-)
What is more commonly used in French - aimer or plaire?
thank you,
Nancy
It would be very helpful to have a translation of these dictation exercises
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