French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,734 questions • 29,428 answers • 837,155 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,734 questions • 29,428 answers • 837,155 learners
To say "I liked spending time with you" which is the correct answer, or can they both be correct?
a) J'ai aimé...
b) J'ai bien aimé...
I can't seem to differentiate between the cojugate form of etre and avoir when used with the first person Je. Par exemple:
Je suis grand.
versus
J'ai cinq ans.
They both seem to mean "I am" in the above sentence.
Does this mean that y and le are interchangeable when à is used as a preposition? Obviously meaning is slightly changed but would the different meaning make a huge problem?
e.g. je le veux vs je veux y venir
Does Lawless French plan on incorporating audio questions to their Kwizis? (For example: "type what you hear".) I really enjoy doing the listening practices and know they're beneficial, however, since you cannot earn points doing them, it can be hard sometimes to find enough motivation to do them over the arguably easier kwizis.
Also, if this addition was to be made, it could be optional. (e.g. "Would you like to include audio questions in this kwizi?" or something like that.)
Just an idea :)
Hi,
In which cases do we use "parmi" and in which cases do we use "d'entre" ?
Thanks!
HI ..
i am in A2 level with 80% score , dashboard shows recommend level is B1 but all the recommend lessons stay in A2 .. i don't want to manually jump to B1, I am wondering when the B1 lesson will be added in.
How is this verb conjugated? There is a phrase in the vocabulary lesson sent out today that contains the phrase: Je regarde les bourgeons éclore...
This doesn't look like the normal conjugation for a -re verb. Please advise! Thank you.
Rien ici n’est cher. This lesson doesn’t say why we don’t add pas as in Rien ici n’est pas cher. Please explain why pas isn’t used. Thanks.
I assumed "dont" would be the correct answer since the relative pronoun is for "se servir de" which is a verbal phrase.
I thought "de laquelle" was only used for prepositional phrases ( près de, à côté de, autour de, etc)
However, both answers are marked correct. Can someone please clarify this for me, please?
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