Friday A1 Writing Challenge - Week 26

Notebooks let you save and organize lessons to focus on specific grammar topics. Add lessons, study them, and test your knowledge later.

List of lessons related to the Writing Challenge Level A1, Week 26, first published on the 07/10/16

Level Kwiziq score Lesson Lesson Award  
A1 : Beginner   Using le, la, l', les before nouns when generalising (definite articles)
A1 : Beginner   Using le, la, les with weights and measures (definite articles)
A1 : Beginner   Definite articles contract with à and de in French (French Contracted Articles)
A1 : Beginner   Du/de la/de l'/des = Some/any (French Partitive Articles)
A1 : Beginner   Adjectives ending in -eux become -euse in the feminine in French
A1 : Beginner   Adjectives ending in -s or -x change in the plural forms only when feminine in French
A1 : Beginner   Colour descriptions change according to gender and number (French Colour Adjectives)
A0 : Entry Level   Adjectives usually go AFTER nouns in French (Position of Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Position of French Adverbs - general rule
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ce/cet/cette and ces = this/that and these/those (French Demonstrative Adjectives)
A1 : Beginner   Writing decimal numbers in French
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate regular -er verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate avoir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate être in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate aller in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate faire in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate verbs in the near future in French using aller + infinitive (Le Futur Proche)
A1 : Beginner   Asking questions in French with "qui/que/quoi/quand/où/comment/pourquoi/combien" (French Question Words)
A1 : Beginner   On can mean either we/one/people (French Subject Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   C'est, ce sont = this is, these are (French Demonstrative Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Expressing how you are with aller (Greetings in French)
A1 : Beginner   Talking about the weather in French - il fait + [adjectif]
A1 : Beginner   Standalone adjectives after c'est are always masculine
A1 : Beginner   An vs année, matin vs matinée, jour vs journée, soir vs soirée to express a time unit or a duration in French
B1 : Intermediate   Dernier = final/previous (French Adjectives that change meaning according to position)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Avoir raison/tort/de la chance = To be right/wrong/lucky (French Expressions with avoir)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate devoir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing necessity and obligation in French with "il faut"
A0 : Entry Level   Je voudrais vs je veux to say that you want something in French
A0 : Entry Level   Describing things in French with c'est = it is
A1 : Beginner   "C'est" vs "Il/Elle est" to say it is/she is/he is in French
Let me take a look at that...