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14,955 questions • 32,448 answers • 1,016,817 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,955 questions • 32,448 answers • 1,016,817 learners
Pls is "assez" still serving as adverbe in a sentence where 'être' is used. - "Ma Ville est assez banale". Qu'est-ce que cela veut dire, s'il vous plaît?
You hinted I should use ‘he would study’. I used ‘il étudierait’ but you translated: il allait étudier. Why?
So - how would you say - "That shirt suits you well, but it doesn't fit you"
Yes, I know there are other ways to express this eg. "It suits you but you need to find a smaller size". But I'm specifically looking for how the two are differentiated using 'aller a'.
TIA
It would be helpful to have the dictation slower, or at least become slower as one needs to hear it repeatedly
A little bit of confusion here
Here you can see that if is followed by a verb in the Simple Past (won),
As a simple Englishman, I translate that as passé simple which is clearly not what is meant
In an A1 focus test I wrote"ton père est DANS la prison" because a prison is a physical enclosure. It was marked as incorrect. could you please explain why? Thanks.
I found this on the Lawless French website. Which is correct?
Is there a reason for the negative form being different? And if so, why doesn't it apply with the verb etre? Is it to do with tangible and intangible objects, as in, if I drink beer I am drinking THIS beer in my glass whereas if I don't drink beer, this refers to beer in general?
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