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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,729 questions • 29,398 answers • 836,776 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,729 questions • 29,398 answers • 836,776 learners
Isn't it supposed to be "une bouteille de champagne fraîche?" We're talking about a fresh bottle, yes?
For the question 'In spite of herself Katia started to hope' I used 'en dépit d'elle'. This was marked wrong and malgré given as the correct answer. What am I missing here? The lesson says that you can use either.
Je ne comprends pas le verbe “patiner” dans ce cadre, où il veut dire “Come to a standstill.” Je cherche des définitions, mais je suis pas arrivé à le reconciler le traduction.
Shouldn't it be 'je suis allée' as the person speaking is female?
Based on the user questions here as well as on some other lessons, it seems Kwiziq would be well served to have some learners review the lessons to see if they are clear enough. I know I've seen quite a few pages that were unclear due to insufficient explanation or examples. (I just finished 4 semesters of French, so I'm not really learning but trying not to let it slip away. Still, I have noticed lessons that aren't as clear and/or complete as they could be.)
Is cuillère à thé a fixed phrase meaning a teaspoon for measuring? The lesson says à generally means what something is used for, however, this phrase would then mean "a spoon for tea," not a "teaspoon."
It would be helpful to include an example iin the lesson for expressing the date with days of the week included. For example how to say Thursday the 12th of March.
le jeudi 12 mars
Dumb question - It is "Nous nous sommes dit" because the second "nous" is an indirect object so there is no agreement, right?
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