black friday
Save 40% on
all
Premium packages
cyber monday
How Kwiziq works
French learning library
- Grammar lessons
- Vocabulary themes
- Listening practice
- Reading practice
- Speaking practice
- Writing practice
- Fill-in-the-blanks
French Q&A Forum
Leaderboards
For teachers
Testimonials
French learning Blog
FAQs
For teachers
Pricing
Sign in
How Kwiziq works
Explore
French learning library
- Grammar lessons
- Vocabulary themes
- Listening practice
- Reading practice
- Speaking practice
- Writing practice
- Fill-in-the-blanks
French Q&A Forum
Leaderboards
For teachers
Testimonials
French learning Blog
FAQs
For teachers
Pricing
Sign in
French
Spanish
More
Get started for FREE
Join FREE
French
»
Exercise: At the beach
»
Studylist for exercise %s
Studylist for exercise %s
A list of the topics covered in this exercise.
French grammar
Register for free to test your knowledge
Score
Definite articles contract with à and de in French (French Contracted Articles)
Adjectives usually go AFTER nouns in French (Position of Adjectives)
Compound nouns formed with prepositions à/de/en in French
Conjugate regular -er verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
Conjugate avoir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
Conjugate être in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
Conjugate faire in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
Asking yes/no questions in French with intonation, est-ce que, n'est-ce pas (French Questions)
Il/elle/ils/elles = it/he/she/they (French Subject Pronouns)
Saying your name with Je m'appelle/Tu t'appelles/Vous vous appelez
Moi/toi/lui/elle = Me/you/him/her - simple cases (French Stress Pronouns)
Aimer = to love, like something/someone in French
Plurals of the and a = les and des (articles) in French
Nous/vous/eux/elles = Us/you/them - simple cases (French Stress Pronouns)
Avoir [nombre] ans = To be [number] years old (French Expressions with avoir)
Expressing ongoing actions in the present in French with "être en train de"
Common mistakes with mon/ma/mes, ton/ta/tes and son/sa/ses (French Possessive Adjectives)
Pour + [infinitive] = In order to + [do] in French
Nous vs on to say "we" in French (French Subject Pronouns)
Getting that for you now...