French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,934 questions • 32,415 answers • 1,014,178 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,934 questions • 32,415 answers • 1,014,178 learners
In the sentence "Au final, ce que je préfère avec la Saint-Valentin, c'est trouver les chocolats à prix réduit que l'on peut acheter en général le 15 février dans les magasins !" what is the purpose of the "l'" before on? Merci !
My quiz has the answer for this as "Vous vous êtes caché dans le placard" I don't understand why it is cassé and not cassés . I know agreement for reflexives can be complicated but this doesn't seem to be one of those cases.
I've seen the use of ne (without pas etc). I've seen it with the subjunctive but also I think in another context. What does this mean and when do you use it?
The sentence, "Pourtant, elle le méritait vraiment", refers to something in the previous sentence, which is "Surya n’a jamais gagné de médaille d'or aux Jeux Olympiques, ce qui est vraiment dommage." The 'le' is used instead of 'la' because it refers to gaining the gold medal, a masculine reference, as opposed to "la médaille d'or", a feminine reference. Is that the correct interpretation as to why 'le' is used ?
Can you add a writinge exercise graded by AI for us to pratice using the words?
Est- ce qu'on dit " Je voudrais te raconter une expérience que j'ai vécue" ou "Je voulais te raconter une expérience que j'ai vécue
I always understood that if you use 'on' that you had to match it with 'son mécontentement 'ie. 'On' with 'son' and 'nous' with 'notre'
Can anyone clarify ?
What do the French consider to be a billion? 100,000,000 or 1,000,000,000?
Pourquoi avez-vous utilisé le dans l'expression "pour le goûter" et pas la, alors qu'il s'agit de la tarte, qui est un mot féminin ?
My best guess right now is that à is used with definite articles, and dans is used with indefinite ones. So "Je vais au parc," and "Je vais dans un parc." Is that correct?
Find your French level for FREE
And get your personalised Study Plan to improve it
Find your French level