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13,782 questions • 29,624 answers • 845,709 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,782 questions • 29,624 answers • 845,709 learners
Do we use "se coucher" with "the sun sets at 9" as in "Le soleil se couche à 9h"? If so, may be worth mentioning in the lesson.
This helped me with my french assignment in school so much!! Thank you !!!! pogchamp
In the statement "J'aime bien ta voiture, elle est mieux que la leur." why "mieux" is used despite the fact that "voiture" is feminine?
Kwiziq, I think this lesson needs a little reviewing!! There's much confusion in this for learners at the minute.
"This is a number written in French: "14,052" How would it be expressed in English?"
The correct answer to this is also '14,052' fourteen thousand and fifty two, but I'm told the answer is incorrect. The only reason you would ever put a fullstop in there '14.052' would be to express a very accurate measurement for example '14.052g' - fourteen point zero five two grams.
What are the different usages of habiter and vivre
J’ai bu une demi-bouteille.
J’ai bu la moitié de la bouteille.
Nous n’utilisons qu’une moitie du sac de riz.
Il mange qu’une moitie du biscuit.
Can someone explain in a different way from the lesson... which basically says they mean the same.
we use "soirée" in the sentence CETTE soirée s'est très bien passé which translates to "THAT EVENING" , even if we consider it to be a duration and not a point in time ,isn't there a rule that when we use demonstrative adjectives(this, that etc. ) we use quantity words like jour, an, soir etc.
Hello -
I'm still confused about why "Nous nous habillions à 6 heures et demie", "We got dressed at half past 6", is imparfait and not passe compose. This seems to be one specific event (not describing a repeated action), is complete, has a clear beginning (6:30), and isn't an opinion or (I don't think) story background. What rule would I use to know it's imparfait?
In a French blog that I was reading, I came across a lot of "qu'apprendre". For example, "beaucoup de Français pensent qu'apprendre un langue..." or "beaucoup de Français trouvent qu'apprendre l'anglais..." or even "études ont monté qu'apprendre une langue étrangère" - so I assumed that if "que + verb" then the verb would be in the infinitive. But I could not find this confirmed by lawlessfrench.com. Could someone clarify if que + verb require the infinitive?
- Merci!
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