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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,073 questions • 30,482 answers • 887,094 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,073 questions • 30,482 answers • 887,094 learners
Dear French team. i have just started lessons on your platform. i started to like it. however i am still making up my mind. in the meantime i was about to take the Diagnostic test but i closed it because it was too late. then next day its marking me C1 level . can you please clarify and i want to do the test so that i can check my progres.. thanks. on the way to premium version. viola. Merci beaucoup.
In the second part of the last sentence, "je viens juste d'emménager à Berlin !" is the correct answer.
I used déménager because I thought it was the general verb to use when moving from one place or one city to another.
And, I thought emménager implied moving into a house or apartment, rather than moving from one city to another.
Please clarify the different meanings. Thanks
If I point to a tarte (little cake), which is a feminine word, and say “It’s me who made this” (not the most elegant phrase, but bear with me), should I say “C'est moi qui l'ai fait” or “C'est moi qui l'ai faite”?
I’m trying to tease out whether the “past participle agreement with direct object when before the verb” rule applies even if the feminine object has not been *linguistically* referenced (only referenced, visually, or implicitly in some other way).
In Part 3 : La seule chose qu'elle nous a laissé faire, ce sont les carreaux, here "les carreaux" has been translated as "the windows" and I think that may be an error. Or are they a particular type of window that she had in her room that she didn't know how to clean?
In the last sentence, the correct response uses "fait de". Why isn't "rend" acceptable? Is it because rendre is strictly = make something + adjective, not make something into something else + adjective?
Salut.
Il y a une différence entre écablousser et patauger?
Salut ! C'est quoi la différence entre ces deux mots, "une liasse" et "un paquet" ? Is "une liasse" used for stacks of papers?
Thanks.
I am struggling to understand when to use c’est rather than il/elle est despite having read through the suggested lesson. Can someone please help?
In the phrase 'une sensation de liberté telle qu'elle n'en avait jamais ressenti' why is ressenti not feminine ?
(Also, does the 'en' stand for anything grammatical or is it idiomatic?)
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