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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,973 questions • 30,146 answers • 867,965 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,973 questions • 30,146 answers • 867,965 learners
I just wanted to offer that it helps me to remember the correct use of this verb if I think about it in this way.
"Je lui manque" = "I am missed by her/him." -> (ie. S/he misses me.)
"Nous manquons à Pat." = " We are missed by Pat." (ie. Pat misses us.)
This method helps me to remember 1) the order of the sentence, 2) the subject to use to conjugate the verb, and 3) that there is an indirect object (by, à) so you have to use an indirect pronoun (or à if using a noun).
Can you please add more sentences for this lesson? For instance, there is no sentence for "Nous pouvons" :(
Thank you
What does he prefer to drink? : ___ il préfère boire?
The correct answer is marked as > is incorrect.
Any explanations will be much appreciated!
pourquoi vous êtes retourné au lieu de êtes retournés
In the writing challenge: Not the festival type, the translation given for "If I'd known how it would be" is Si j'avais su comment ça se passerait
May I know why we use plus-que-perfect in the “Si” clause and a conditionnel present in the result clause? Based on what I have learned in French grammar, when the pluperfect tense is used in the “Si” clause, the past conditional tense has to be used in the result clause.
In exercise "Fishing with my father C1". Could you please explain the use of devais in
je ne devais pas avoir plus de dix ans. If it's; I mustn't have been... isn't that the passe composse ?
Why is the sentence fragment "J'écoute du Beethoven" and not "J'écoute à Beethoven"? When would someone use 'écouter à' vs 'écouter de'?
This is a contribution to help others who might find this confusing:
In French, there are certain sentence constructions or even verbs that could be made negative with just the addition of "ne". The addition of "pas" and the likes isn't necessary. This concept is called "Ne littéraire".
Clauses containing "si" are one of those instances where the Ne littéraire could be used.
For further study of the concept, check: https://www.lawlessfrench.com/grammar/ne-litteraire/
Hello, i have classic Imparfait vs Passe compose questions:
Can someone explain to me why "je n'ai pas toujours aimé ça" and not " je n'aimerais pas toujours ça". I thought this is the case where you describe opinion in the past.
Also instead of "je m'y suis habitué" can I use "j'en avais l'habitude" or "j'en ai l'habitude". Is the use "avoir l'habitude de" or "se habituer" can be interchangeable or they should be use in different context?
how do I get other stories. I lost the one about the father who reassures his son about the monster under the bed.
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