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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,964 questions • 32,471 answers • 1,017,855 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,964 questions • 32,471 answers • 1,017,855 learners
Why are the sentences "Elles sont belles" and "Elles sont aussi bonnes..." using elles instead of c'est/ce sont?
It would be great to add a summary of the types of adjectives that go before - namely beauty, age, goodness, size. This would help to quickly remember this list.
So, I've been listening to Ta Reine by Angele and I was wondering why in the line: Il lui faudra du temps, c'est sur, pour oublier tous ses prejuges Il and lui are right next to each other. Is it a thing where there's a direct pronoun before the verb? Or if it's something with grammar?
Thank you!
"Jacques est descendu du haricot magique." was translated to: "Jack got off the magic beanstalk." I answered, "Jack climbed down the beanstalk" and it was marked wrong. Larousse clearly states that "descendre de" (using etre as the auxiliary verb) means "climb or climb down". Hence, my confusion.
Que dire de la neige qui est ------ ?
1) tombé
2) tombée
Hi, I saw this test somewhere and it the right answer was 1 "tombé".
but, I think 2 is correct because la neige is feminie!, help please
Bonsoir,
I think there is a mistake in the translation of "tu sens ça? I translated it as Do you smell that?, Do you feel that? but had it only partially correct. Your answer also noted Do you taste that? To taste is normally translated as goûter - so why are you using sentir instead? It does not sound right. Please explain. Thanks !
lol this story.
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