French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,709 questions • 29,361 answers • 835,647 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,709 questions • 29,361 answers • 835,647 learners
In the statement "J'aime bien ta voiture, elle est mieux que la leur." why "mieux" is used despite the fact that "voiture" is feminine?
Is there a reason "he'll be back" is translated once as "il sera de retour" and once as "il sera revenu"? Or are they simply alternatives?
I have tried to figure out why some words in the example sentences are in bold and some are underlined, but I don't get it and I can't find it in FAQ or anything.
Et si la souris est un garcon?
Why is it "je ne lis pas les journaux" and not "je ne lis pas de journaux"?
question was write 25 to midnight, previously been told that past noon should use 24 hour clock so wrote vingt-trois trente-cinc , but yet again it wrong and said minuit moins vingt cinq
In this text, why does she say 'J'ai vécu', but then say 'Je faisais partie' et 'J'organisais'....
I am wondering why the different tenses here, as surely 'living' was an on-going occurrence ?
Jennifer
When is "we went into (the garden)" "Nous sommes sortis dans le jardin" and when is it "nous sommes allé dans le jardin" The former is used in this exercise but the latter was used in the first exercise "A day with granddad"
I came across "Mes amis sont très..." with the prompt, "My friends are very loyal.", during a practice exercise mixed with other assorted grammar concepts. Not realizing at the time that it was an exercise to practice different -al endings, my first instinct was to put "fidèles" rather than "loyaux". Could "fidèles" be an alternative answer?
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