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14,442 questions • 31,274 answers • 931,831 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,442 questions • 31,274 answers • 931,831 learners
Followed by a plural verb normally?
As it is the girl who says that she is sure, shouldn't it be "Je suis sûre que ... " instead of "Je suis sûr que ... ?
Also, is "Ce n'est pas grave" (with silent "ne") an accepted alternative for "C'est pas grave" in writing dictation? (I often can't hear all the little words in spoken French but still try to include them in my written responses)
Is there a lesson that explains this use of l/le? I see it a lot, but I don't fully understand when it is needed and when it isn't needed.
In 'Lawless French - Grammar Lessons there is the following example denoting 'going to' that uses SUR not À.
un vol SUR Paris > a flight to Paris
'sur' is not mentioned in the lesson above, could you please explain."Elle va au marche" i always thought that if there is a vowel right after like va and au that we abbreviate?
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