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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,883 questions • 32,339 answers • 1,007,741 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,883 questions • 32,339 answers • 1,007,741 learners
How does an adverb derive its masculin or feminine form? The adjective derives it's gender from the noun it is describing, but when the adjective is turned into an adverb, where does the gender come from?
I read the lesson and it says you use "des" for countable objects and "du, de la, de l' and des" for uncountable objects.
How do you know when to use "des" for uncountable objects instead of "du"?
I had put "suffisante", as I thought that that was refering to the exigence (feminin). Is this masculine bcause "ce que" acts like "c'est" and requires a neutral ie masculin adjective? Or is the agreement with something other than exigence?
Why is your answer Je vais à piscine and not Jee vais à la piscine.
Weekend workout for the 19th
For "in a separate bowl"
J'ai utiliisé 'un bol separé rather than un bol à part
does separé not work here? Merci 😀
I got marked wrong on skipping "Qu'est-ce que cela ?" as an option for "what is this"?
Isn't "cela" strictly for "that"?
Merci beaucoup:)
Can you also say ' Je n'étais pas permise à les manipuler'?
when to use ce qui versus en to replace an entire phrase
I dont understand and the translation just says the Bohemian life.What is that?
I had exactly the same problems with the pronunciations mentioned. Even at the very beginning I could swear she said, 'je rendais visite à' (I was visiting) However it was all good fun imagining what she was trying to say and I cetainly got the gist of it all.
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