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13,943 questions • 30,074 answers • 864,276 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,943 questions • 30,074 answers • 864,276 learners
ahah, I see that a lot of people are having some trouble understanding the difference, as well as i.
I went a bit more simple, here are the sentences I'm confused with:
j'ai encore écris lui, mon prof codagej'ai de la chance parce que il a [le répondu]/[répondu lui] il y a deux jourin the first sentence, I understand that I have to use indirect pronouns as I'm writing *to* [person]. However, this makes it kind of similar in the second sentence as he responded *to* it, but it can be easily confused with lui as I've already mentioned someone with the same type of subject? I'm just confused overall aaaa.
I'm trying to get to grips with noun complements as well as the content of this lesson. Both involve de and d' and maybe des (I am confused!) Can you suggest other lessons that could help with this thorny subject please.
Another question:
For 'I have long wavy hair', can I write also 'J'ai les longs cheveux ondulés'?
Thanks.
Question: why does this mean "we fear that he would change his mind" ? Is it the ne-que=only? that he changes his mind?
This was on my Kwizig test and I just don't see anything that indicates "would."
merci,
anne
I don’t understand why “Je me suis bien amusée.” adds the “e” for the feminine subject but “Je me suis lavé les dents.” does not when both speakers are female.
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