French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,718 questions • 29,376 answers • 835,978 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,718 questions • 29,376 answers • 835,978 learners
I love this site-- but I think they have done a bad job explaining what, if any, is the difference. Especially in the quizzes. what am I missing?
When do you use une in place of la in french
I used "de même qu'". Can you explain why this isn't correct in this context, please?
I know that I can use the passe compose when expresing the habits with" apres que"
is it valid for "quand,aussitôt que,dès que,lorsque,une fois que,
for example
Je me brosse les dents quand je me suis lèvé (first ı get up then I brush my teeths)
aussitôt je me suis levé, Je me brosse les dents
dès que je me suis levé, Je me brosse les dents
lorsque je me suis levé, Je me brosse les dents
une fois que, je me suis levé, Je me brosse les dents
I wish your helps... Merci beaucoup.
Who would say "Carefree" after someone asks for their receipt? Is that a Britishism? Would not "No problem" or "No worries" be a better translation?
Bonjour,
Hello I was wondering for one of your example sentences you use le not sur why not sur?
On aime aller se balader le weekend.
Thanks
Nicole
Hi, I live in Québec and I've been here for quite a while now. Whenever people want to refer to lunch here, they use dîner. Déjeuner is used to mean breakfast, and souper is used to mean lunch. The test said I was wrong when I translated lunch as dîner and I understand that since in France it means a completely different mealtime. Just wanted to post this so that others could be aware of the different vocabulary we use in Québec, since it was really confusing to me for a long time.
"tu n'écoutes pas Alice" sounds like Alice is the one who isn't listening
question was about walking in MOMA but what is that? effects use, no?
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