French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,792 questions • 29,643 answers • 846,964 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,792 questions • 29,643 answers • 846,964 learners
Maybe it's just on my end but the "avoir" example has "eu" and "pris" examples under it.
Bonjour Kwiziq, je m'appelle Spencer et je viens d'Atlanta au Amérique.
I did miserably on this exercise. Seems that in progressing from B1 to B2 one faces quite a chasm. Without a bridge.
By the time you were ready, the bus was already gone.
The given answer is: Le temps que tu sois prête, le bus était déjà parti.
But both clauses of his sentence seem to be in the past, so is it okay (even better) to write:
Le temps que tu aies été prête, le bus était déjà parti. ?
qui+est = qu'est ??
Does this mean numerous people and ancient cultures? I ask because I would have expected the phrase to be numerous ancient people and cultures but for that to be the case wouldn't anciennes have to be masculine to reflect the mixed gender of the group of nouns?
Hi - As Adrian mentioned, this is not enough to explain the change from de to du
Note that de becomes du / de la / de l' / des depending on the gender and number of the noun following it (e.g. of the).
Although Chris has offered good explanations in this Q&A forum - it should be in the lesson itself - Can you please add the variation.
Je ne comprends pas pourquoi parfois quand je donne une réponse, le Quizbot dit que ma réponse n'est pas correcte mais dans le "pourrais aussi dire" il me donne exactement la même réponse que je l'ai écrite ?
Is there a deal for family members who want to get Premium plans at the same time?
I understand that, as a general rule, in French, we add definite articles before a country’s name. E.g.: J’aime la France. However, I also understand that if the country’s name comes after “de”, and the country is feminine, then, we omit the definite article. E.g.: Je viens de France. However, I am terribly confused by the phrase “Au service de la France” - why is there a definite article after “de” in this phrase?
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