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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,964 questions • 32,475 answers • 1,017,901 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,964 questions • 32,475 answers • 1,017,901 learners
There should be an option to play slowly do each word could be deciphered separately. This would be a good addition to the listening practise section.
I'm confused because on many other sites I see both these used as conditionnel. E.g., J'avais pu = I had been able to/could have
Si tu avais pu, tu aurais fait = If you could have, you would have.
Please explain.
Dear kwiziq team :)
How do you say in French in order not to or so as not to? For example: In order not to be tired, I went to bed early. Is there a specific pattern we have to use to say this?
I was in the town hall in "Le Broc" yesterday, and the sign said "La mairie de Le Broc". Are you sure you've got this rule right? Following this train it would be "Elle va a Le Broc", not "Elle va au Broc". However I did notice that there were somes signs in the town saying e.g. "Carroserie xx du Broc", so it seems like there's some ambiguity here. I would assume the town hall would be correct?
N'importe qui va pouvoir faire = anyone can do... How would this sentence be completed retaining the original wording?
One of the fill-in-the-blanks exercises has a line, "En novembre, je fais antichambre."
What does this mean, (as it's quite foreign to my American sensibilities)??
Do you recommend listening and repeating a listening exercises until I get it right, or just about right, or take one exercise and then move on to the next? Thanks!
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