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13,730 questions • 29,411 answers • 836,960 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,730 questions • 29,411 answers • 836,960 learners
« Les cloches sont passées ce matin pour apporter les œufs de Pâques » but in the other quizz « Il a passé l’hiver dernier à Chamonix ». In my mind it should be avoir in both sentences.
Following on from Henrik's question about distinguishing between singular and pluriel. I heard that she was making multiple costumes (no doubt due to the other mothers' apathy as pointed out below), but the next bit is "j'ai jusqu'à lundi pour que tout soit terminé" . I thought that it would be "pour que tous soient terminés" because multiple costumes. But those 2 options really would sound identical wouldn't they? Would they both be equally correct in this exercise?
Please explain why partir is used instead of aller for "Where are you going this year"?
Thank you
Do these adjectives always agree in gender and number to the object it refers to?
I think the answer is yes, looking at the examples given, but as it is not specifically written (like in other lessons), it's always good to confirm!
Why it says "docteur ès sciences mathématiques" rather than "docteur en sciences mathématiques"? Does it have different meaning?
Why dont we say that "J'ai entendu tout" like "Je comprends tout" but "J'ai tout entendu"?
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