Nouns & Articles
A0: Entry Level
- When not to use un/une while stating people's occupations or professions in French (Zero Article)
- Le/la/l' = The (French Definite Articles)
- Un/une = A or An (French Indefinite Articles)
- Plurals of the and a = les and des (articles) in French
- Job titles differ in French depending on whether you're a man or a woman (nouns)
- Most French nouns take an -s in the plural unless they already end in -s, -x, -z
A1: Beginner
- Using "le" with days of the week + the weekend (French Definite Articles)
- Using le, la, l', les with continents, countries & regions names (definite articles)
- Using le, la, les with weights and measures (definite articles)
- Using le, la, les with body parts and clothing (definite articles)
- Definite articles contract with à and de in French (French Contracted Articles)
- Du/de la/de l'/des = Some/any (French Partitive Articles)
- Identifying the gender of nouns by some specific word endings in French
- Forming the plural of French nouns ending in -eu
- Forming the plural of French nouns ending in -au or -eau
- Forming the plural of French nouns ending in -al
- Surnames don't pluralise in French
- Continents/countries/counties/regions/states are masculine, feminine or plural in French (Gender)
- Using le, la, l', les before nouns when generalising (definite articles)
- En/l'/au with seasons (French Articles and Prepositions)
- Using le, la, les with titles, languages and academic subjects (definite articles)
A2: Lower Intermediate
- De plus en plus de / de moins en moins de + [nom] = more and more / less and less + [nouns] (Comparisons in French)
- Some French nouns have different meanings depending on whether they're masculine or feminine
- Forming the plural of French nouns ending in -ou
- Some plural English nouns are singular in French and vice versa