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14,958 questions • 32,466 answers • 1,017,338 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,958 questions • 32,466 answers • 1,017,338 learners
Hi, why does “the que before the penser” (b) & (c) become “a quoi after the penser” (a)?
(a) “Et vous, vous pensez QUOI des selfies ?”
(b) “Et vous, QUE pensez-vous des selfies ?”
(c) “Et vous, QU'est-ce que vous pensez des selfies ?”
Wow, I just must say that this one in every sentence had idiomatique phrases of which I've never heard, or seen introduced in any of your lessons. I'm not sure of the value of having to make so many guesses on what I'm hearing, since context gives almost no clue with those type of phrases. Isn't the point of these to recognize what you've learned?
C'est avril 2021 et je viens d'écouter cette émission et la vitesse est parfaite. C'était la première fois je n'ai pas fait de fautes ! Félicitations à l'équipe à Kwizgiq !
Je ne peux pas apprécier cette humour ! C’est simplement pas quelque chose avec laquelle je peux identifie; pas rigolote; ridicule au plus.
You really need to work on these types of exercises. Sometimes if there are two example sentences and you write one word from example one but the rest of your sentence matches example two, it marks that sentence wrong even though it is right. You need to include every combination of correct sentences!
I can't speak for the other English speakers around the world, but as a native-born & bred Yank I can tell you that the word "whom" is almost nonexistent in American English. About the only places you will see or hear this in the States is in literature, academia, formal correspondence or maybe in the entertainment or news media. The reality is that Americans overwhelmingly use "who" in all of these cases to the extent that it is the accepted norm (even though it may drive the English professors crazy).
We don't have much to eat
Is the following a possible translation?
Nous n'avons pas beaucoup à manger
Hi ☺️
I want to say :(the sky is clear ) what should i say? I couldn't find an appropriate word in the dictionary.
Can you help me ?
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